Centre for International Health, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Bergen, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2011 Nov 17;11:315. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-315.
Research on health care utilization in low income countries suggests that patients frequently bypass PHC facilities in favour of higher-level hospitals - despite substantial additional time and financial costs. There are limited number of studies focusing on user's experiences at such facilities and reasons for bypassing them. This study aimed to identify factors associated with bypassing PHC facilities among caretakers seeking care for their underfive children and to explore experiences at such facilities among those who utilize them.
The study employed a mixed-method approach consisting of an interviewer administered questionnaires and in-depth interviews among selected care-takers seeking care for their underfive children at Korogwe and Muheza district hospitals in north-eastern Tanzania.
The questionnaire survey included 560 caretakers. Of these 30 in-depth interviews were conducted. Fifty nine percent (206/348) of caretakers had not utilized their nearer PHC facilities during the index child's sickness episode. The reasons given for bypassing PHC facilities were lack of possibilities for diagnostic facilities (42.2%), lack of drugs (15.5%), closed health facility (10.2%), poor services (9.7%) and lack of skilled health workers (3.4%). In a regression model, the frequency of bypassing a PHC facility for child care increased significantly with decreasing travel time to the district hospital, shorter duration of symptoms and low disease severity.Findings from the in-depth interviews revealed how the lack of quality services at PHC facilities caused delays in accessing appropriate care and how the experiences of inadequate care caused users to lose trust in them.
The observation that people are willing to travel long distances to get better quality services calls for health policies that prioritize quality of care before quantity. In a situation with limited resources, utilizing available resources to improve quality of care at available facilities could be more appropriate for improving access to health care than increasing the number of facilities. This would also improve equity in health care access since the poor who can not afford travelling costs will then get access to quality services at their nearer PHC facilities.
在低收入国家,有关医疗保健利用的研究表明,尽管患者需要额外花费大量的时间和金钱,但他们仍经常绕过初级卫生保健机构而选择更高层级的医院。针对这些机构的用户体验和选择绕过这些机构的原因,相关研究的数量有限。本研究旨在确定在寻求五岁以下儿童医疗服务的护理人员中,哪些因素与绕过初级卫生保健机构有关,并探索利用这些机构的人的体验。
本研究采用混合方法,包括在坦桑尼亚东北部科罗戈韦和穆埃扎区医院为寻求五岁以下儿童医疗服务的护理人员进行问卷调查和深入访谈。
问卷调查包括 560 名护理人员。其中进行了 30 次深入访谈。在索引儿童患病期间,348 名护理人员中有 59%(206 名)未利用较近的初级卫生保健机构。选择绕过初级卫生保健机构的原因包括缺乏诊断设施的可能性(42.2%)、缺乏药物(15.5%)、卫生机构关闭(10.2%)、服务质量差(9.7%)和缺乏熟练卫生工作者(3.4%)。在回归模型中,前往区医院的旅行时间越短、症状持续时间越短、疾病严重程度越低,护理人员选择绕过初级卫生保健机构的频率就越高。深入访谈的结果表明,初级卫生保健机构服务质量差会导致获得适当护理的时间延迟,以及护理体验不佳会导致用户对其失去信任。
人们愿意长途跋涉以获得更好质量的服务,这一观察结果表明,在注重数量之前,卫生政策应优先考虑护理质量。在资源有限的情况下,利用现有资源提高现有设施的护理质量,可能比增加设施数量更有助于改善获得医疗保健的机会。这也将改善卫生保健获取方面的公平性,因为无法承担旅行费用的穷人将能够在较近的初级卫生保健机构获得高质量的服务。