Fearful of the foothold that Tuberculosis (TB) may take in Papua New Guinea (PNG) villages during the closure of international borders between Australia and PNG, and the TB transmission risk this poses to residents of the Torres Strait, the Torres and Cape TB Control Unit (TBCU) have undertaken extraordinary measures using locally-derived data to improve TB service delivery in their region.
Throughout the process, the absolute importance of community consultation and utilising Indigenous Health Workers was a high priority.
Although working from home, the TBCU was cohesive with an unfailing commitment to improve outcomes for patients.
Improving outcomes for tuberculosis patients in the Torres Strait - Papua New Guinea border region
Initiative Type
Service Improvement
Status
Deliver
Added
Last updated
Summary
Key dates
Mar 2020
Jun 2021
Implementation sites
Torres Strait Islands
Aim
To use locally derived research outputs and turn them into evidence-based practice in our program to improve TB patient outcomes.
Benefits
- implementation of advanced diagnostic technology
- reduction in time patients need to remain in either home or hospital isolation
- increased confidence for clinicians who may have never known that TB exists in Australia, let alone been involved in its management
- reduction in numbers of patients needing to travel to Cairns for diagnostic procedures that can be done by Torres and Cape HHS clinicians with the right training
- improved quality of specimens collected
- reduction in costs associated with 'no-tests' - cost to patients who need to remain in isolation until three quality specimens have been collected, sent to Brisbane and the results received, as well as reduced HHS and Pathology Queensland costs.
Background
The outbreak of COVID-19 resulted in the closure of the international border between Australia and Papua New Guinea (PNG) in 2020. There was great fear of the foothold TB may take on PNG villages during this time and the TB transmission risk this poses to residents of the Torres Strait.