2018
DOI: 10.1088/1755-1315/125/1/012142
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Quality of life of pulmonary TB patients after intensive phase treatmentin the health centers of Medan city, Indonesia

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The study conducted in Ciamis, Indonesia using WHOQOL-BREF instruments revealed that pulmonary TB has an enormous negative effect on the quality of life of pulmonary TB patients (Sartika et al, 2019). The statement is consistent with other studies that also investigate the quality of life of pulmonary TB patients: a study conducted in Cameroon, Central Africa using the SF-36 questionnaire (Pokam et al, 2020); a study in Medan, Indonesia conducted at Adam Malik General Hospital using the measurement instrument SF-36 (Wahyuni et al, 2018); and a study carried out in Surabaya, Indonesia using the RAND-36 Item Health Survey (Juliasih et al, 2020). In addition, a study conducted in Hamadan, Western Iran using the SF-36 instrument stated that improving the quality of life can improve adherence to ATT as well as the function and well-being of TB patients (Mamani et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…The study conducted in Ciamis, Indonesia using WHOQOL-BREF instruments revealed that pulmonary TB has an enormous negative effect on the quality of life of pulmonary TB patients (Sartika et al, 2019). The statement is consistent with other studies that also investigate the quality of life of pulmonary TB patients: a study conducted in Cameroon, Central Africa using the SF-36 questionnaire (Pokam et al, 2020); a study in Medan, Indonesia conducted at Adam Malik General Hospital using the measurement instrument SF-36 (Wahyuni et al, 2018); and a study carried out in Surabaya, Indonesia using the RAND-36 Item Health Survey (Juliasih et al, 2020). In addition, a study conducted in Hamadan, Western Iran using the SF-36 instrument stated that improving the quality of life can improve adherence to ATT as well as the function and well-being of TB patients (Mamani et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…However, this finding sharply contradicts the outcome of previous studies in Cameroon, Indonesia, and Iran. [11][12][13] The respondents' overall moderate level HRQOL in this present study can also be related to their high psychological score status since they can still engage in everyday activities, along with having some social support from their surroundings and some financial resources. The impact of a low minimum wage or low income on HRQOL is supported by the findings of Fang et al, 14 representing that TB patients with annual incomes well below the country's average had the highest frequency of missing medication doses due to opportunity and transportation costs during treatment despite free provision for TB patients.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…The research study found that the quality of life differs depending on the education level of tuberculosis patients (Wahyuni et al, 2018). The findings suggest that a person's education level affects their quality of life when their role is limited due to emotional problems.…”
Section: Tuberculosis Patient Education and Quality Of Lifementioning
confidence: 83%