• Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Condition
  • Archive

ARK Foundation

  • Home
  • About
    • About Organization
    • Our Partners
    • Global Networks & Leadership
  • Our Team
    • Advisor
    • Executive Director
    • Research and Development
    • Research Uptake & Communications
    • Programme and Training
    • Finance and Administration
    • Data and Field Management
  • Our Work
    • Communicable Disease
    • Non-communicable Disease
    • Multimorbidity
    • Antimicrobial Resistance
    • Maternal, Newborn, Child and Reproductive Health
    • Nutrition
    • Health Systems
    • Climate Change and Environment
    • Gender, Equity and Social Inclusion
  • News & Media
    • Event
    • News
    • Blog
    • Video
    • Newsletter
  • Resources
    • Journal Article
    • Report
    • Working Paper
    • Project Brief
    • Policy Brief
    • Conference Proceedings
    • Infographics
    • Posters
  • Career
  • Contact
/ Published in Blog, Case Study, News and Media

World Tuberculosis Day: Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an mHealth intervention (mTB-Tobacco) for smoking cessation in people with tuberculosis (Quit4TB Trial)

World Tuberculosis Day

By Ai Keow Lim, Fahmidur Rahman & Maham Zahid

 What is TB and how smoking impacts TB

Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial infection spread through respiratory droplets dispersed into the air, when someone with TB coughs and sneezes. Smoking increases the chances of contracting TB infection and TB disease. TB patients who smoke are more likely to experience severe forms of clinical presentation, poor response to treatment both bacteriologically and clinically, and have higher rates of treatment failure compared to non-smokers. The strong association between smoking and TB has led to increasing recognition for more evidence-based approaches to smoking cessation for TB patients.

Potential for digital and mHealth solutions for TB patients who smoke

Our previous randomised controlled trials (RCT) in Bangladesh and Pakistan provided strong evidence to support face-to-face behavioural interventions in achieving high quit rates. Despite the known benefits of integrating behavioural interventions into TB treatment, no country with high burden of TB has yet been able to consistently provide in-person counselling to help patients with TB quite smoking due to challenges related to costs, reach and sustainability. To address the challenges of scaling up face-to-face interventions, WHO have developed mTB-Tobacco to help TB patients quit smoking by sending motivational and informative short message messages (SMS) message to their phones. Although mHealth interventions through text messages are cheaper to deliver than in-person sessions, there is still uncertainty regarding whether they can achieve the same level of effectiveness. Further research is needed to determine their true value.

Quit4TB Trial

Our aim was to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of mTB-Tobacco in smoking cessation in TB patients who smoke daily in Bangladesh and Pakistan.  We also assessed the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of mTB-Tobacco in enhancing TB treatment adherence and improving clinical outcomes. In this multi-center, cluster randomised, controlled trial, SMS texts were sent to patients with TB to encourage behaviour change and provide motivational and informative messages. A total of 2,716 smokers with TB were recruited in this study.

 Phase 1 Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) activities

Phase 1 of this study involved consultation with the PPI members about the study processes. PPI members helped review and provide feedback on the participant facing materials including SMS messages for comprehension, clarity, and tone. In Bangladesh, the PPI members comprised of one manager, five DOTS (directly observed treatment, short-course) workers and five TB patients. In Pakistan, the eight members comprised of two TB patients, two family members, three general public members, and one non-medical TB staff members. PPI members were briefed about the study and their roles in this study. Translated versions of the SMS messages were shared with PPI members. SMS messages that were considered as unclear or inappropriate to the PPI members were rewritten.

 

Phase 2 pilot study

A total of 16 participants were recruited. The pilot evaluated using two sets of data: users’ self-reported experiences and their real-time engagement with the programme. Users’ experiences were collected through face-to-face/phone-based interactions. Key questions focused on users’ experience of taking part in the mTB-Tobacco programme; the clarity, quantity, timing and frequency of messages; what was good about the programme and what was not; completion or non-completion the programme; and any effect on their attitudes or target behaviour(s).

Phase 3 superiority trial

We compared mTB-Tobacco (intervention) with usual care (control). Each participant in the intervention group received a total of 134 SMS messages over a period of 6 months. In the first two months, the frequency of messages was 4 to 5 messages per day, in next two month the frequency reduced to 1 to 2 messages per day and in the last two months only 1 message was sent per week. In addition to mHealth smoking cessation package, the intervention group received education leaflets from TB health professionals. Each participant in the control group received the same patient education leaflets from TB health professionals. The leaflets contain information on the harmful effects of tobacco and advice on stopping its use.

Phase 4 non-inferiority trial

We compare mTB-Tobacco with face-to-face behavioural support. Participants in face-to-face behavioural support will receive two face-to-face sessions delivered at day 0 and day 5 (+2) and which last 10 and 5 minutes respectively. The sessions will be structured using an educational flipbook; the session on day 0 will be aimed at encouraging tobacco users to see themselves as non-users and set a plan for a quit date five days later; with a session on the quit date (day 5) to review progress. Further encouragement and support (if needed) will be offered at a subsequent visit at week 5.

Engagement with patients, carers, communities, healthcare providers and government

During the implementation of the trial, the QUIT4TB trial study teams in Bangladesh and Pakistan engaged with TB patients, their caregivers, treatment providers, and authorities overseeing TB program operations at both grassroots and national levels. A stakeholder and community engagement team (formed by RESPIRE and the local study teams) involved various stakeholders from the beginning of the project and engaged with them throughout the project lifecycle. The engagement activities fostered effective relationships among stakeholders while sharing experiences, raising awareness about TB, and empowering them with knowledge related to TB treatment and trial ethics. To help bridge the gap between research, policy and practice, the local study teams presented the trial summary and shared preliminary findings with the policymakers, public health researchers and practitioners. Stakeholder engagement is an ongoing effort of this trial to foster strong relationships, trust and buy-in for future policy development and implementation.

Mainly published in: https://communities.springernature.com/posts/world-tuberculosis-day

What you can read next

Low budget or management flaws? Experts flag inefficiency in health spending
Experts urge policy reforms to strengthen urban health systems in Bangladesh
দেশের ৪২.৭ শতাংশ জনগোষ্ঠী পরোক্ষ ধুমাপানের শিকার

Recent Posts

  • Precision at Scale: Managing 3,559 Survey Clusters in the World’s Largest Refugee Settlement

    Find the pdf version here or read it here By  Z...
  • The Areca Nut Paradox in Bangladesh: A Rapid Review of Cultural Embeddedness, Public Health Risks, Livelihood Dependence, and Policy Gaps

    Read it here or download the PDF version By Nab...
  • Why does it matter? Childhood obesity among school going children in Urban Bangladesh: Potential Way Forward

    Read the PDF here Written by Badruddin Saify Fo...
  • How SCIMITAR-SA turns barriers into better support to quit tobacco

    Find the HTML version  SCIMITAR-SA is built aro...
  • Strengthening Tobacco Cessation Through Local Adaptation

    Find the HTML version here  WP1 focuses on adap...
  • 𝐒𝐂𝐈𝐌𝐈𝐓𝐀𝐑-𝐒𝐀 | 𝐒𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐧 𝐒𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬 𝐭𝐨 𝐐𝐮𝐢𝐭 𝐓𝐨𝐛𝐚𝐜𝐜𝐨

    Find it here A tobacco cessation intervention d...
  • Factors associated with knowledge, attitude, practice and training interest of drug sellers in shaping antimicrobial resistance: A cross-sectional study in urban Bangladesh

    Find the PDF here  or HTML version here  ...
  • Country Case Studies on Implementation of Drowning Prevention Activities

    This study will consist of ten in-depth country...
  • Where antibiotics enter the city: what we are learning with drug sellers in Mirpur

    Written by: Asiful Haidar Chowdhury (Senior Res...
  • Closing the Gap: How Urban Primary Health Care Can Achieve Health Equity

    Written by: Marhouba Khan Asfi (Research Assist...
  • Field Reflections from CHORUS Project 1 and 2: Listening Between Appointments, Streets, and Silence

    Written by: Nabila Binth Jahan (Junior Research...
  • When Public Spaces Aren’t Truly Public: Making Physical Activity Safer for Women and Girls in Urban Bangladesh

    Written by: Umme Salma Anee (Senior Research As...
  • Addressing the Knowledge Deficit: Health Education and Public Awareness in Bangladesh

    Written by: Kazi Fatin Sami (Research Assistant...
  • Behind the Numbers: Verifying Immunization Coverage in the Rohingya Camps

    Written by: Ibrahim Hasan (Research Assistant) ...
  • Field Reality: What We Learned While Assessing Smoke-Free Public Places

    Written by: Lenik Chakma (Research Assistant) I...
  • The Hidden Tax on Health: Why Diabetes is Bankrupting Bangladesh’s Families

    Written by: Sirat-E-Rowshan Islam (Research Upt...
  • Social determinants of health (SDOH) and its relationship with clinical and economic outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes in Bangladesh

    Social determinants of health and its relations...
  • Universal Health Coverage needs more than a bigger budget. It needs institutions and skills

    As the nation is heading towards its 13th natio...
  • Developing and evaluating an adapted behavioral activation intervention for people with depression and diabetes (DiaDeM)

    DiaDeM stands for “Developing and evaluating an...
  • ThinkSpace: Quarterly Research Digest

    ARK Foundation is pleased to launch ThinkSpace,...

Empower Your Career with ARK Foundation

Discover opportunities to make a difference in health, education, gender equality, and environmental sustainability.

JOIN US

ARK Foundation is a non-government, non-political and not-for-profit organization dedicated to the socio-economic development of Bangladesh. Through evidence-based research, training and communications it provides sustainable solutions for health, education and social development.

ADDRESS

Suite A-1, C-3 & C-4, House # 06, Road # 109,
Gulshan-2, Dhaka, Bangladesh, 1212

Phone: +88 02 55069866

Email: info@arkfoundationbd.org

LOCATION

  • GET SOCIAL

© 2025. All rights reserved. ARK Foundation.

TOP