Setting: Rio de Janeiro City, Brazil.
Objective: To compare community-based directly observed treatment (DOT) for tuberculosis (TB), using community health workers (CHWs), with clinic-based DOT.
Design: In a longitudinal study in a cohort of TB patients in a region of Rio de Janeiro city, we evaluated treatment modalities and outcomes in 1811 patients diagnosed with TB between 1 January 2003 and 30 December 2004. Patients were offered DOT when they presented to out-patient clinics for an initial diagnosis. DOT was provided in the clinic or in the community, using CHWs, for patients living in a large favela. Outcomes of treatment were assessed using treatment registry databases.
Results: Of the 1811 TB patients, 1215 (67%) were treated under DOT; among these, 726 (60%) received clinic-based treatment and 489 (40%) community-based treatment. Patients offered community-based treatment were more likely to accept DOT (99%) than those offered clinic-based treatment (60%, P<0.001). Treatment success rates for new smear-positive and retreatment TB cases were significantly higher among those treated with community-based DOT compared to clinic-based DOT.
Conclusion: We conclude that using CHWs to deliver DOT in the community may improve TB treatment outcomes in selected areas such as urban slums.