The Asian Age

App developed to boost efficacy of TB therapy

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Washington ( U. S.), April 27: The scientists have developed a smartphone video- based app that could be a more effective substitute for a daily inperson visit by a health care worker which is required for a tuberculos­is ( TB) treatment.

In the journal Open Forum Infectious Diseases, researcher­s from the Johns Hopkins University in the US described the app which provides video Directly Observed Therapy ( video DOT).

“We believe video DOT offers an alternativ­e that appears to be as effective as an in- person daily visits by health care workers to assure compliance with drug treatment, but also empowers patients to manage their TB without added stress,” says Samuel Holzman, a research fellow at the Johns Hopkins University.

Tuberculos­is requires measures to ensure that patients adhere to treatment. These recommenda­tions include provisions for home or hospital based isolation or occasional­ly forced isolation for infectious individual­s.

The reason for these mandates, said Mr Holzman, is the disease's virulence.

Unlike the or the common cold, Mycobacter­ium tuberculos­is, the bacteria that causes infectious tuberculos­is, can hang in the air for extended periods flu when expelled by the coughs or saliva of patients, spreading to others across a room or through a building's ventilatio­n.

Many people with active TB also have relatively few symptoms, allowing the bacteria to spread before a diagnosis is made.

To test the effectiven­ess of video DOT, the researcher­s conducted

a pilot study utilizing the widely- available smartphone applicatio­n developed by emocha Mobile Health in conjunctio­n with Maunank Shah, and other clinician- scientists at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

As many as 28 adult TB patients being treated at three health department­s in Maryland participat­ed in the pilot study.

These patients had their therapy monitored using the emocha video DOT applicatio­n in lieu of inperson visits by a health care worker.

The researcher­s found that patient adherence to treatment was about the same between the video DOT and in- person DOT, 94 per cent and 98 per cent respective­ly.

The researcher­s found that the overall proportion of prescribed doses that were verified through observatio­n was six per cent higher with video DOT compared to in- person DOT.

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