A review of workplace tuberculosis policies in selected low- and middle-income countries in Asia-Pacific.
- Author:
Evalyn A. ROXAS
1
;
Vivien Fe F. FADRILAN-CAMACHO
2
;
Paul Michael R. HERNANDEZ
2
;
Maria Margarita M. LOTA
1
;
Loisse Mikaela M. LOTERIO
1
;
Adrian Paul M. AGRAVANTE
2
;
Daniella Kate B. CORPUZ
3
;
Carlo R. LUMANGAYA
3
;
Richelle Liza F. MAGLALANG
3
;
Micaela J. AREVALO
3
;
Vicente Y. BELIZARIO JR.
4
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article, Original
- Keywords: Workplace Policies; Low- And Middle-income Countries; Tuberculosis Program; Tuberculosis In The Workplace
- MeSH: Human; Tuberculosis
- From: Acta Medica Philippina 2025;59(4):65-77
- CountryPhilippines
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported that most of the tuberculosis (TB) cases are aged between 15 to 54 years old, the working population. This study described workplace policies on TB in selected low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) in Asia-Pacific.
METHODSAmong the LMICs, countries wherein TB is a public health concern were included. Six policies written in English were included in this study and were reviewed based on the components of the TB workplace programs that were extracted from the WHO Guidelines for Workplace TB Control Activities.
RESULTSThe Philippine policy had the most number of components while those of Cambodia and Papua New Guinea had the least. Only the component on implementing environmental controls was common among the policies. Components on respecting patient rights and confidentiality, tailoring of workload to TB patient’s state of health, registration of all patients with TB diagnosis, reporting of cases to central NTP office, recording of standard treatment outcome, and inclusion of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) provisions were missing for the majority of the policy documents.
CONCLUSIONThe workplace TB program policies included in this study can be reviewed and updated accordingly, with the coverage expanding to all workplaces. The policies can also integrate measures on COVID-19 as the pandemic has slowed the progress in TB control. With the similarities in the preventive measures against TB and COVID-19, this can be an avenue to develop integrated policies especially for workplaces.