Chhea Chhordaphea, Warren Narelle, Manderson Lenore
School of Psychology, Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2010 Jul-Sep;10(3):1391. Epub 2010 Jul 29.
A decade after health sector reform, public health services in rural Cambodia remain under-utilised for multiple reasons related to financial, structural and personnel factors. Ineffectiveness of rural public health services has led to a significant increase in private providers, often the same people who staff public facilities. Public health clinics are often portrayed as low quality, with long waiting times and unexpected costs; in contrast, private clinics are seen to provide more convenient health care. Several strategies, including contract management and health equity funds, have been introduced to improve public sector performance and encourage utilization; these efforts are ongoing. However, the feasibility of these strategies remains in question, particularly in terms of cost-effectiveness and sustainability.
In this article the strategies of and barriers met by health workers who remain in rural areas and deliver public health services are elucidated. Ethnographic research conducted in 2008 with health providers involved in treating tuberculosis patients in Kampong Speu Province, Cambodia is drawn on. Participants were recruited from the provincial health department, provincial hospital and four health centres. Data collection involved in-depth interviews, participation in meetings and workshops aimed at health workers, and observation of daily activities at the health facilities. Data were transcribed verbatim, imported into NVivo software (www.qsrinternational.com) for management, and analysed using a grounded theory approach.
Primary healthcare service delivery in rural Cambodia was reliant on the retention of mid-level of health staff, primarily midwives and nurses. Its performance was influenced by institutional characteristics relating to the structure of the health system. Personal factors were impacted on by these structural issues and affected the performance of health staff. Institutional factors worked against the provision of high-quality public health services, and included the fragmentation of service delivery and structure, limited capacity and shortage of high-qualified health staff, competition with the private sector, and shortage of medical supplies. These factors all de-motivated health staff, and undermined their performance in public service positions. Personal factors were paramount for staff retention. These included: optimism and appreciation of work responsibilities and position, the personal ability to cope with financial barriers, and institutional benefits such as opportunities for professional development, job security, financial opportunities (via performance-based allowances), and status in society. Individual financial coping strategies were the dominant factor underlying retention, but alone were often de-motivating: clients were diverted from the public services, which led to distrust, and thus undermined the capacity of public system. There was significant interaction between institutional and personal factors, which impacted on the effectiveness of health staff retention in rural areas. Health workers tended to remain in their government positions for prolonged periods of time because they experienced personal rewards. At the same time, however, their job performance in the public health services were hindered by challenges related to the institutional factors.
The interaction between institutional factors and personal factors was crucial for effectiveness of health staff retention in rural Cambodia. Efforts aimed at ensuring quality of care and encouraging health staff retention should attempt to remove the institutional barriers that discourage the use of rural public health services.
在卫生部门改革十年后,柬埔寨农村地区的公共卫生服务因多种与财务、结构和人员因素相关的原因而未得到充分利用。农村公共卫生服务的低效导致了私人医疗服务提供者的显著增加,而这些提供者往往也是公共卫生机构的工作人员。公共卫生诊所常常被描述为质量低下,候诊时间长且费用意外;相比之下,私人诊所则被认为能提供更便捷的医疗服务。为了提高公共部门的绩效并鼓励利用公共卫生服务,已引入了多种策略,包括合同管理和卫生公平基金;这些努力仍在继续。然而,这些策略的可行性仍存疑问,特别是在成本效益和可持续性方面。
本文阐述了留在农村地区提供公共卫生服务的卫生工作者所采用的策略以及遇到的障碍。本文借鉴了2008年对柬埔寨磅士卑省参与治疗结核病患者的卫生服务提供者进行的人种志研究。研究参与者从省级卫生部门、省级医院和四个卫生中心招募。数据收集包括深度访谈、参与针对卫生工作者的会议和研讨会,以及观察卫生机构的日常活动。数据被逐字转录,导入NVivo软件(www.qsrinternational.com)进行管理,并采用扎根理论方法进行分析。
柬埔寨农村地区的初级卫生保健服务依赖于中级卫生人员的留用,主要是助产士和护士。其绩效受到与卫生系统结构相关的机构特征的影响。这些结构问题影响了个人因素,并进而影响了卫生人员的绩效。机构因素不利于提供高质量的公共卫生服务,包括服务提供和结构的碎片化、能力有限以及高素质卫生人员短缺、与私营部门的竞争以及医疗用品短缺。所有这些因素都削弱了卫生人员的积极性,并损害了他们在公共服务岗位上的表现。个人因素对于人员留用至关重要。这些因素包括:对工作职责和职位的乐观态度和认同感、个人应对财务障碍的能力,以及诸如职业发展机会、工作保障、财务机会(通过绩效津贴)和社会地位等机构福利。个人财务应对策略是人员留用的主导因素,但仅凭这一点往往会削弱积极性:患者从公共服务转向其他地方,这导致了不信任,从而削弱了公共系统的能力。机构因素和个人因素之间存在显著的相互作用,这影响了农村地区卫生人员留用的有效性。卫生工作者往往会长时间留在政府岗位上,因为他们获得了个人回报。然而,与此同时,他们在公共卫生服务中的工作绩效受到与机构因素相关的挑战的阻碍。
机构因素和个人因素之间的相互作用对于柬埔寨农村地区卫生人员留用的有效性至关重要。旨在确保医疗质量和鼓励卫生人员留用的努力应试图消除阻碍农村公共卫生服务利用的机构障碍。