Birbeck Gretchen L, Munsat Theodore
Department of Neurology, African Studies Center Faculty, Michigan State University, #138 Service Road, A217, East Lansing, MI 48824-1313, USA.
J Neurol Sci. 2002 Aug 15;200(1-2):75-8. doi: 10.1016/s0022-510x(02)00132-6.
In many parts of the developing world, access to physician consultation and neurologic expertise is limited or nonexistent. We conducted a survey among non-physician, primary healthcare workers (PHCWs) to determine the neurological needs and services in rural Zambia.
Semi-structured written questionnaire utilizing fill-in-the-blank, multiple-choice likert-scaled questions, and open-ended questions.
Seizures were reported as the most common neurologic disorder by 66% of the PHCWs. Only 1/3 of PHCWs reported feeling adequately trained to care for seizures and seizure disorders. PHCWs reported even less expertise for other neurologic conditions. Over 40% of PHCWs surveyed work in primary care clinics without a physician available for consultation. Their patients must travel a median of 50 km to access a physician and geographic barriers are a frequent problem. In addition to difficulty physically accessing care, PHCWs reported that financial barriers to physician referral are substantial. Expenses cited include additional user fees for physician-level care, transportation costs, and the cost of maintaining the patient and/or family at a site distant from the home village. Traditional beliefs, social stigma, and discriminatory healthcare policies associated with neurologic conditions were also noted to deter and defer care and care seeking.
PHCWs lack sufficient training and experience to care for the neurologic disorders in their patient populations, although such disorders are relatively common. Geographic, financial and cultural barriers substantially limit physician referrals. To assure at least a minimal quality of care for people with nervous system disorders in Zambia, PHCWs' neurologic education must be increased and barriers to physician referral decreased.
在发展中世界的许多地区,获得医生咨询和神经科专业知识的机会有限或根本不存在。我们对非医生的基层医疗工作者(PHCWs)进行了一项调查,以确定赞比亚农村地区的神经科需求和服务情况。
采用半结构化书面问卷,包含填空、多项选择李克特量表式问题和开放式问题。
66%的基层医疗工作者报告称癫痫是最常见的神经疾病。只有三分之一的基层医疗工作者表示感觉自己接受了足够的培训来护理癫痫及癫痫相关疾病。基层医疗工作者报告称对其他神经疾病的专业知识了解更少。超过40%接受调查的基层医疗工作者在没有医生可供咨询的基层医疗诊所工作。他们的患者必须平均跋涉50公里才能看医生,地理障碍是一个常见问题。除了实际获得医疗服务困难外,基层医疗工作者报告称,将患者转诊给医生还存在巨大的经济障碍。提到的费用包括医生级护理的额外用户费用、交通成本以及在远离家乡的地方照顾患者和/或其家人的费用。还注意到与神经疾病相关的传统观念、社会耻辱感和歧视性医疗政策会阻碍和延迟护理及寻求护理。
基层医疗工作者缺乏足够的培训和经验来护理其患者群体中的神经疾病,尽管此类疾病相对常见。地理、经济和文化障碍严重限制了向医生的转诊。为确保赞比亚神经系统疾病患者至少能获得最低质量的护理,必须加强基层医疗工作者的神经科教育,并减少向医生转诊的障碍。