TB Research

P-201. Mental Health Interventions in TB Care: A Systematic Scoping Review in the SAARC Region

Namrata Rana, Pushpita Samina, Gurher Sidhu, Amrita Daftary

Open Forum Infectious Diseases · 2026-01

Abstract

Abstract Background One in four people with tuberculosis (TB) face mental health (MH) challenges. Poor MH hinders TB health-seeking, treatment success, and post-treatment outcomes. We reviewed approaches to provide MH care for people with TB in the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) region, where 37% of people with TB live. Methods We searched three databases (Medline, Embase, Global Health) for studies implementing an explicit mental health service or intervention to people undergoing TB screening, diagnosis and/or treatment in a SAARC country from 2000-2024. Extracted data were narratively synthesized. Results 2304 unique records were retrieved and yielded 17 eligible studies from India (n=10), Pakistan (n=6), and Nepal (n=1). Eight studies were among people with MDRTB. Interventions included MH counselling (n=15, varied schedule, content, framework, and delivery approach), pharmacological intervention (n=9, anti-depressants, anxiolytics, withholding MDRTB drugs) and breathing exercises (n=1). Interventions were implemented at clinics providing TB services (n=15) with off-site activities (n=5) and/or referrals to mental health centres (n=4); one was entirely via telehealth. MH professionals (psychiatrists, psychologists, n=9), nurses (n=1), social workers (n=3), pharmacists (n=1), and other cadres (peer supporters, patient navigators, lay counsellors, DOTS facilitators, n=9) were engaged in intervention delivery. Mental health was assessed using standardized tools (n=14); five studies assessed substance use. All studies reporting post-intervention mental health outcomes (n=7) (anxiety, depression) and TB outcomes (n=10) (case notifications, treatment completion, adherence, failure, loss-to-follow-up, drug resistance, death) reported improved outcomes. Improved patient satisfaction (n=2), quality of life (n=2), cardio-pulmonary measures (n=1), and reduced stigma (n=1) were also reported. Seven studies implemented cointerventions: nutrition (n=5), economic support (n=7), and vocational rehabilitation (n=2). Conclusion Effective people-centred TB care requires addressing TB-comorbidities. We found MH interventions can be integrated in TB care settings to support achievement of improved TB and MH outcomes Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures

MeSH terms

  • Medicine
  • Psychological intervention
  • Mental health
  • Stigma (botany)
  • Tuberculosis
  • Intervention (counseling)
  • Social stigma
  • Family medicine
  • Mental illness
  • Psychiatry
  • Health care
  • Nursing
  • MEDLINE
  • Quality of life (healthcare)
  • Public health