Setting: The Singapore Tuberculosis Control Unit.
Objectives: 1) To identify any demographic, social, disease or treatment-related characteristics which may be predictive of patients defaulting from treatment; 2) to assess the effectiveness of home visits as a means of defaulter recall; 3) to ascertain outcome in these patients.
Design: A retrospective, case-controlled study of TB treatment defaulters, defined as patients who missed their scheduled appointments and required a home visit to recall for treatment. Controls were randomly selected, non-defaulting patients who started treatment on the same dates as the defaulters.
Results: Forty-four patients required home visits in 1996. Compared to controls, defaulters were more likely to be non-Chinese, and to live on their own or with friends. There was no significant association of defaulting with age, sex, marital or employment status, disease characteristics, or treatment-related factors. Seventy per cent defaulted during the continuation phase of treatment. Home visits did not result in contact with the patient (or any other person) 41% of the time. Although 48% of the defaulters remained lost to follow-up at the time of the survey, all but one of the sputum-positive patients had bacteriologically converted by the time of default.
Conclusion: Non-Chinese ethnicity and lack of family support were found to be factors strongly predictive of default. Age, sex, marital and employment status, treatment-related factors and disease characteristics were not significant in distinguishing those at risk for defaulting.