“…Substantial shortcomings in case-detection are not only due to the limitations in available diagnostic strategies and time-consuming laboratory tests (Pai et al, 2012;Engel & Pai, 2013). Barriers to diagnosis and treatment also include geographical challenges, economic difficulties, communication issues (Chemtob et al, 2000), fears of stigma (Nair et al, 1997;Coreil et al, 2010), unregulated private health care practices (Bhargava et al, 2011), non-adherence to treatment (Greene, 2004) and gender biases in health-seeking behaviour (Wang et al, 2008;Atre et al, 2009). Often left to operate at an intuitive level, perspectives from the humanities and social sciences contribute significantly to tackling the problem of TB by providing conceptual tools to pay attention to complexity, question the familiar, reconfigure boundaries to create novel frameworks and to critically examine assumptions, arguments and false reasoning (Porter, 2006).…”