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TB Stigma in the UK: Patients Experiences and Everyday Responses (TB stigma)

2026年5月21日 更新者:Bournemouth University

Making Sense of Tuberculosis (TB) Related Stigma in a Low-incidence Area of the UK: Patients Experiences and Everyday Responses

Public understanding of tuberculosis (TB) is shaped by sociocultural norms, educational background, and personal experiences. Misconceptions about TB transmission, disease severity, and treatment side effects are widespread, contributing to stigma and fear of social rejection. Such stigma can lead individuals to conceal their diagnosis, limiting access to support, engagement with healthcare, and overall health literacy.

TB-related stigma is recognised as a significant barrier to ending the global TB epidemic, affecting quality of life and access to care. Yet in high-income, low-incidence (HILI) countries like the UK, its prevalence, influence, and lived impact remain largely unexplored. Where stigma appears in research, it is often treated as an emerging theme, leaving a critical gap in understanding how individuals with TB, or those caring or supporting them, experience and respond to it.

This study adopts a Constructivist Grounded Theory (CGT) approach to examine TB-related stigma in depth. CGT allows the research to explore how people living with TB make sense of, interpret, negotiate, and resist stigma, capturing the dynamic and contextual ways it shapes their lives, identities, and interactions with healthcare systems. By investigating these meaning-making processes, the study aims to illuminate how stigma operates in the UK, providing insights to inform future stigma-reduction interventions, communication strategies, and supportive healthcare practices, ultimately benefiting patients, communities, and the NHS.

調査の概要

状態

まだ募集していません

詳細な説明

This study involves qualitative interviews with NHS patients diagnosed with tuberculosis (TB) exploring experiences of TB-related stigma using a constructivist grounded theory approach. The main ethical issues relate to participant vulnerability, informed consent within an emergent qualitative design, confidentiality, power imbalance, and data protection.

TB is a stigmatised condition, and discussing experiences of stigma may cause emotional distress. This has been addressed through the use of sensitive interviewing practices - commonly used by the researcher in their professional role as a TB Consultant Nurse, clear participant control over the interview process, and the right to pause, decline questions, or withdraw at any time. Interviews will be paused if participants show signs of emotional distress.

Participants will be given time to recover and asked whether they wish to proceed with the interview or stop.

Participants will be provided with information on relevant NHS and support services should participation raise concerns or distress.

Because constructivist grounded theory involves iterative (cyclical or repeated) analysis and co-construction of meaning, informed consent is treated as an ongoing process. Participants receive clear explanations of the study aims and methods in accessible language, and consent is revisited verbally at the start of each interview. Participation is voluntary, and withdrawal is possible without consequence to clinical care.

There is a risk of perceived coercion due to recruitment within NHS services and the patient-researcher power imbalance. This is mitigated by separating research from clinical care, using non-clinical recruitment where possible (including advertising through networks), and explicitly stating that participation or non-participation will not affect treatment.

Confidentiality and anonymity are key considerations due to the small number of TB patients within individual NHS Trusts and the risk of deductive disclosure. All data will be anonymised, identifying details removed or altered, and findings reported in a way that minimises identification. Data will be stored securely in accordance with UK GDPR and NHS data governance requirements.

The study also raises ethical considerations regarding representation and interpretation of participant accounts. Reflexive practices are used to address researcher positionality and power in co-constructing data, and findings will be disseminated responsibly to avoid reinforcing stigma. Overall, the study has been designed to minimise risk, protect participant dignity and autonomy, and comply with NHS ethical, legal, and governance requirements.

研究の種類

観察的

入学 (推定)

20

連絡先と場所

このセクションには、調査を実施する担当者の連絡先の詳細と、この調査が実施されている場所に関する情報が記載されています。

研究連絡先

研究場所

    • Dorset
      • Bournemouth、Dorset、イギリス
        • University Hospitals Dorset
        • コンタクト:
        • 主任研究者:
          • David Thomas, MRes, BSc, RN

参加基準

研究者は、適格基準と呼ばれる特定の説明に適合する人を探します。これらの基準のいくつかの例は、人の一般的な健康状態または以前の治療です。

適格基準

就学可能な年齢

  • 大人
  • 高齢者

健康ボランティアの受け入れ

いいえ

サンプリング方法

非確率サンプル

調査対象母集団

Initially purposive sampling of patients or ex-patients who are/have been diagnosed with TB in the last 10 years. Theoretical sampling will then follow to explore emergent data themes e.g marginalisation, racism, language barriers etc.

説明

This study seeks participants who have been diagnosed with pulmonary TB, extrapulmonary TB, latent TB infection (LTBI), and drug sensitive or drug resistant TB within the last 10 years. Participants may have different cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds and will be resident within a pre-defined TB low-incidence coastal/rural area of the UK.

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 18 or over at start of study
  • Resident in rural or coastal areas within South or Southwest England
  • Diagnosed with either active or latent TB within the last 10 years

Exclusion criteria

  • Lacks mental capacity or is unwilling to consent to participate in the study
  • Under 18 years of age
  • Lives in an area of TB high-incidence (above 10 cases/100,000 population) or outside of rural and coastal areas of South/Southwest England

研究計画

このセクションでは、研究がどのように設計され、研究が何を測定しているかなど、研究計画の詳細を提供します。

研究はどのように設計されていますか?

デザインの詳細

コホートと介入

グループ/コホート
People diagnosed with active or latent TB in the last 10 years
Aged over 18. Living in coastal or rural areas of South, Southwest England (TB low incidence areas). Able to understand, converse and consent to participation using the English language.

この研究は何を測定していますか?

主要な結果の測定

結果測定
メジャーの説明
時間枠
TB stigma in the UK: Patients experiences and everyday responses
時間枠:From enrolment to completion of interviews is likely to be up to 3 months for individual participants. Recruitment runs for 10 months.
The aim of this study is to understand how individuals diagnosed with tuberculosis in a rural and coastal area of Southwest England experience, interpret, and respond to TB related stigma, and to develop a Constructivist Grounded Theory that accounts for the social processes shaping its production and negotiation.
From enrolment to completion of interviews is likely to be up to 3 months for individual participants. Recruitment runs for 10 months.

協力者と研究者

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スポンサー

出版物と役立つリンク

研究に関する情報を入力する責任者は、自発的にこれらの出版物を提供します。これらは、研究に関連するあらゆるものに関するものである可能性があります。

一般刊行物

研究記録日

これらの日付は、ClinicalTrials.gov への研究記録と要約結果の提出の進捗状況を追跡します。研究記録と報告された結果は、国立医学図書館 (NLM) によって審査され、公開 Web サイトに掲載される前に、特定の品質管理基準を満たしていることが確認されます。

主要日程の研究

研究開始 (推定)

2026年9月1日

一次修了 (推定)

2028年3月1日

研究の完了 (推定)

2028年3月1日

試験登録日

最初に提出

2026年4月14日

QC基準を満たした最初の提出物

2026年5月21日

最初の投稿 (実際)

2026年5月27日

学習記録の更新

投稿された最後の更新 (実際)

2026年5月27日

QC基準を満たした最後の更新が送信されました

2026年5月21日

最終確認日

2026年2月1日

詳しくは

本研究に関する用語

個々の参加者データ (IPD) の計画

個々の参加者データ (IPD) を共有する予定はありますか?

いいえ

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米国FDA規制医薬品の研究

いいえ

米国FDA規制機器製品の研究

いいえ

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