Social Acceptance for Patients with Pulmonary Tuberculosis from Their Own Perspective in Rafsanjan, Iran: A Cross Sectional Study

  • Reza Bidaki Professor of Psychiatry, Research Center of Addiction and Behavioral Sciences, Diabetes Research Center, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, Iran
  • Marzie Bagheri Mahonaki Doctor of Medicine (MD), Psychiatry Department, Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences, Rafsanjan. Iran
  • Ziba Shabani Shahrbabaki Associate Professor of Internal Medicine and Infectious Disease Immunology Research Center, Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences, Rafsanjan, Iran
  • Hamid Bakhshi Aliabad Assistant Professor of Biomedicine Sciences, Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences, Rafsanjan. Iran
  • Maryam Sadeh Assistant Professor of Bacteriology, Department of Laboratory Sciences, School of Paramedicine, Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, Iran
Keywords: Behavior, Disease, Social Stigma, Tuberculosis

Abstract

Introduction: Social acceptance is defined as the support by social network for patients via family, friends and colleagues that often reason the better management and prognosis. If the social acceptance is significantly low in patients with chronic diseases like tuberculosis, an appropriate plan can raise the level of knowledge and the culture of the community to enhance the level of patient and community's acceptance. The authors aim to evaluate social acceptance and related factors in these patients in Rafsanjan.

Methods: This was a descriptive and cross-sectional study. It was conducted on 29 pulmonary TB (tuberculosis) patients who had referred to Rafsanjan city health center in Iran in 2014. They were selected by census method. The Marlou-Crown questionnaire was completed by patients, and the scores were calculated based on the questionnaire key using SPSS 16. T-test, Fisher and chi-square tests were used for evaluation, and the significance level was P-value <0.05.

Results: Results showed that the frequency social acceptance among patients was moderate to high (62%) and moderate to low (38%). Fifteen (52%) patients were male and 14 (48%) were female whose age range was 8 to 90.  Among the variables of age, sex, education, place of residence, nationality and family history of patients, the relationship between age، nationality, positive family history of TB and social acceptance was significant (P-value <0.05).

Conclusion: This study concludes that older patients, those with a family history of TB, and migrant patients have higher social acceptance (P-value <0.05).

Published
2022-10-16
Section
Articles