TB Research

Evaluating the impact of cash transfers on tuberculosis (ExaCT TB): a stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial

Priya B. Shete, Jillian L. Kadota, Grace Nanyunja, Catherine Namale, Talemwa Nalugwa, Denis Oyuku, Stavia Turyahabwe, Noah Kiwanuka, et al. (10 authors)

ERJ Open Research · 2023-05

Abstract

Background: Mitigating financial barriers to tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and treatment is a core priority of the global TB agenda. We evaluated the impact of a cash transfer intervention on completion of TB testing and treatment initiation in Uganda. Methods: We conducted a pragmatic complete stepped wedge randomised trial of a one-time unconditional cash transfer at 10 health centres between September 2019 and March 2020. People referred for sputum-based TB testing were enrolled to receive UGX 20 000 (∼USD 5.39) upon sputum submission. The primary outcome was the number initiating treatment for micro-bacteriologically confirmed TB within 2 weeks of initial evaluation. The primary analysis included cluster-level intent-to-treat and per-protocol analyses using negative binomial regression. Results: the pre-intervention period (adjusted rate ratio (aRR)=1.34) with a 95% CI of 0.62-2.91 (p=0.46), indicating a wide range of plausible true intervention effects. More were referred for TB testing (aRR=2.60, 95% CI 1.86-3.62; p<0.001) and completed TB testing (aRR=3.22, 95% CI 1.37-7.60; p=0.007) per National Guidelines. Results were similar but attenuated in per-protocol analyses. Surveys revealed that while the cash transfer supported testing completion, it was insufficient to address long-term underlying social/economic barriers. Interpretation: While it is uncertain whether a single unconditional cash transfer increased the number of people diagnosed and treated for TB, it did support higher completion of diagnostic evaluation in a programmatic setting. A one-time cash transfer may offset some but not all of the social/economic barriers to improving TB diagnosis outcomes.

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Tuberculosis
  • Sputum
  • Rate ratio
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Pediatrics
  • Internal medicine
  • Family medicine