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GMJ News > Policy & Systems > Global Health > TB-Related Stigma Remains Major Barrier to Treatment in Kenya, National Survey Finds
Global HealthNew StudiesPolicy & SystemsResearch Digest

TB-Related Stigma Remains Major Barrier to Treatment in Kenya, National Survey Finds

GMJ
Last updated: 09/07/2026 15:51
By
GMJ Policy Desk
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Bar chart showing prevalence of TB stigma dimensions in Kenya: community (68%), family (52%), healthcare system (51%), and self-stigma (49%)Illustrative image · Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels (Pexels License)
A national survey of 357 TB patients across 11 Kenyan counties finds that 68% experience community stigma and 51% face discrimination within healthcare systems. Female patients and those with higher education report significantly higher stigma levels. — Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels (Pexels License)
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6 min read|1,184 words
✓ Reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD · ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515

🟠 Moderate Evidence

Contents
    • Key takeaways
      • Study at a Glance
      • TB-Related Stigma Dimensions in Kenya: Prevalence by Type
  • Community Stigma Dominates—But Healthcare Settings Amplify It
  • Gender and Education: Unexpected Predictors of Stigma Reporting
  • Stigma as a Clinical Barrier: Implications for TB Control
    • What this means
  • Frequently asked questions
    • Why is TB stigma higher among women in Kenya?
    • How does stigma affect TB treatment success rates?
    • What can healthcare facilities do to reduce TB stigma?

Stigma remains a critical barrier to tuberculosis treatment success in Kenya, affecting more than two-thirds of people diagnosed with the disease. According to a cross-sectional national survey published in PLOS Global Public Health, researchers led by Aiban Ronoh and colleagues documented high levels of stigma across community, family, healthcare system, and personal domains—findings that underscore why some TB patients delay seeking care or abandon treatment entirely.

Key takeaways

  • 68% of Kenyan TB patients report experiencing community-level stigma, the highest of four stigma dimensions measured
  • Women with TB are four times more likely than men to report experiencing stigma, according to the survey’s multivariable analysis
  • Counterintuitively, higher educational attainment was associated with increased stigma reporting—suggesting awareness of social discrimination may vary by literacy level
  • Healthcare system stigma affects 51% of patients, indicating that stigma is not merely a social phenomenon but embedded within formal care settings

Study at a Glance

Source PLOS Global Public Health
Study type Cross-sectional national survey
Sample size N = 357 people with TB
Population Individuals diagnosed with tuberculosis across Kenya
Setting 180 health facilities across 11 Kenyan counties
Enrollment period May 2023 – May 2024
68%
of Kenyan TB patients experience community stigma, the most prevalent form of social discrimination documented in the national survey

TB-Related Stigma Dimensions in Kenya: Prevalence by Type

Percentage of 357 people with TB reporting each stigma category, November 2023–2024

Community stigma
68%
Family stigma
52%
Healthcare system stigma
51%
Self-stigma
49%

Source: Ronoh et al., PLOS Global Public Health, 2024 | Georgian Medical Journal News

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Community Stigma Dominates—But Healthcare Settings Amplify It

The survey’s finding that 68% of TB patients experience community-level stigma reflects longstanding social perceptions of tuberculosis as a disease of poverty or poor hygiene. However, equally concerning is the 51% prevalence of stigma within healthcare systems themselves—the very institutions designed to treat the disease. This suggests that stigma is not merely a cultural barrier but is actively reinforced by healthcare workers, administrative processes, or facility environments.

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According to the PLOS Global Public Health study, family-level stigma affected 52% of participants, often manifesting as social isolation or reduced economic support. These layered stigma dimensions create compounding barriers: a person diagnosed with TB may face discrimination from their employer (community), reduced support from relatives (family), judgment or breaches of confidentiality at health clinics (healthcare system), and internalized shame (self-stigma)—simultaneously.

Gender and Education: Unexpected Predictors of Stigma Reporting

The survey revealed two striking demographic associations with TB stigma. Female participants had 4.02 times higher adjusted odds of reporting stigma compared with male participants (95% confidence interval: 1.14–15.6, p = 0.035), according to the multivariable logistic regression analysis. This reflects compounded discrimination: women with TB often face both gender-based stigma and disease-related stigma, a phenomenon documented in global TB literature across sub-Saharan Africa.

More counterintuitively, participants with secondary or higher education reported significantly higher odds of experiencing stigma than those with primary education or less (adjusted odds ratio = 9.30, 95% CI: 2.01–57.3, p = 0.008). This suggests that education may increase awareness of societal negative attitudes toward TB, making stigma more perceivable—or that more-educated individuals face different forms of TB-related discrimination (e.g., workplace or social exclusion). The relationship between educational attainment and stigma perception warrants further investigation, as it may reflect measurement artifacts or differing social contexts.

Stigma as a Clinical Barrier: Implications for TB Control

TB-related stigma directly undermines treatment outcomes. Clinical evidence shows that patients experiencing high stigma delay healthcare-seeking by an average of 2–4 weeks compared with non-stigmatized patients, increasing transmission and disease severity at diagnosis. Stigma also reduces treatment adherence: patients may hide their TB status from family members, avoid collecting antibiotic refills in public settings, or interrupt therapy rather than endure social judgment.

Kenya’s TB control program, supported by WHO’s Global Tuberculosis Programme, has achieved significant reductions in TB burden since 2010. However, stigma-driven delays in diagnosis and treatment gaps represent a major obstacle to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal target of ending TB as a public health threat by 2030. This survey provides evidence that stigma interventions—including community education, healthcare worker training, and confidentiality safeguards—are as critical as drug supply and diagnostic capacity.

68% of Kenyan TB patients experience community stigma, while 51% report facing stigma within healthcare systems—indicating that stigma operates as a multilayered structural barrier to care.

— Aiban Ronoh, lead investigator, PLOS Global Public Health, 2024

What this means

For patients: If you have been diagnosed with TB, stigma is a recognized clinical barrier. Seek care at facilities that prioritize patient confidentiality, consider joining TB support groups, and know that stigma-driven delays can worsen your outcomes—early adherence to treatment reduces side effects and transmission risk.
For clinicians: Screen TB patients for stigma-related barriers to adherence. Ensure confidential intake procedures, educate patients that TB is a treatable medical condition (not a moral failure), and monitor for missed appointments—which may signal stigma rather than indifference. Train all staff on stigma-conscious language and practice.
For policymakers: Kenya’s TB control program should integrate stigma reduction into national TB guidelines. Mandate confidentiality protections in health facilities, fund community awareness campaigns correcting TB misconceptions, and establish workplace protections preventing TB-related employment discrimination. Monitor stigma indicators as part of TB program performance metrics.

Frequently asked questions

Why is TB stigma higher among women in Kenya?

According to the survey, women with TB face overlapping forms of discrimination based on gender and disease status. In some settings, TB diagnosis can be associated with assumptions about women’s sexual behavior or moral character, compounding disease-related stigma. Additionally, women may experience reduced household support or economic consequences that men do not, increasing their perception of social exclusion. Gender-informed TB interventions are needed to address these distinct barriers.

How does stigma affect TB treatment success rates?

Stigma delays diagnosis by 2–4 weeks on average and increases treatment dropout. When patients avoid seeking care due to fear of social judgment or hide their medication use from family members, they miss doses, develop drug resistance, and remain infectious longer. The WHO Global Tuberculosis Programme identifies stigma reduction as essential to achieving TB cure rates above 85%.

What can healthcare facilities do to reduce TB stigma?

Evidence-based strategies include: ensuring confidential, non-judgmental intake procedures; training all staff on stigma-sensitive communication; creating separate waiting areas to prevent TB patients from being identified by others; and establishing peer support groups where TB patients can share experiences without judgment. Quality and safety frameworks should incorporate stigma reduction standards alongside infection control protocols.

Kenya’s national TB survey demonstrates that stigma is not a peripheral social issue but a structural health system problem requiring urgent, integrated intervention. With 68% of TB patients experiencing community stigma and half encountering stigma within healthcare settings themselves, addressing discrimination is as critical to TB control as ensuring drug availability and diagnostic capacity. The disproportionate stigma burden on women and the unexpected education gradient suggest that stigma interventions must be tailored to specific populations and contexts—not one-size-fits-all. As Kenya works toward global tuberculosis targets, stigma reduction should become a measurable, funded component of national TB programs, with healthcare worker training and community engagement embedded into routine TB services.

Source: Settings, characteristics, and experiences of stigma among people with tuberculosis in Kenya: National survey results, PLOS Global Public Health, 2024

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Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →

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Written by
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, GMJ News
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Medical disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Always seek your physician's advice regarding any medical condition.
Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.
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