Dept of Paediatrics, St Lucas Andreas Hospital, 1006 AE Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2012 Jan 11;12:12. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-12-12.
The health status of chronic sick ethnic minority children in the Netherlands is unequal compared with indigenous Dutch children. In order to optimize the health care for these children a specific patient-oriented clinic in ethnic-cultural diversity: the Mosaic Outpatient Clinic (MOC) was integrated in the general Paediatric Outpatient Departments (POPD) of three hospitals in Amsterdam.
Feasibility of the MOC, factors influencing the health care process and encountered bottlenecks in health care were studied in ethnic minority children with asthma, diabetes type 1 or metabolic disease originating from Morocco, Turkey and Surinam. Feasibility was determined by the number of patients attended, support from the paediatric medical staff and willingness of the patients to participate. Influences on the health care process comprised parents' level of knowledge of disease, sense of disease severity, level of effort, linguistic skills, health literacy, adherence to treatment and encountered bottlenecks in the health care process. Moreover, the number of admissions and visits to the POPD in the years before, during and after the MOC were analysed.
In 2006 a total of 189 ethnic minority children were seen. Integration of the MOC within the general POPD of the hospital is feasible. The ability of the parents to speak and understand Dutch was found to be 58%, functional health literacy was 88%; sufficient knowledge of disease and sense of disease severity were 59% and 67%, respectively. The main bottlenecks in the healthcare process: poor knowledge of disease, limited sense of disease severity and low health literacy in the parents proved to be the best predictors for decreased adherence. After attending the MOC there was a decrease in the number of admissions and visits to the POPD for asthma while the number of visits increased in patients with diabetes and the amount of no-shows decreased in patients with a metabolic disease.
Integration of a MOC in the general POPD is feasible and appreciated by the parents, provides more insight in the problems ethnic minority children and their parents face and shows promising directions for optimizing adherence in these children.
与荷兰本土儿童相比,慢性患病少数民族儿童的健康状况在荷兰不平等。为了优化这些儿童的医疗保健,在阿姆斯特丹的三家医院的普通儿科门诊部门(POPD)中整合了一个特定的以患者为中心的门诊:马赛克门诊(MOC)。
在患有哮喘、1 型糖尿病或代谢疾病的摩洛哥、土耳其和苏里南少数民族儿童中,研究了 MOC 的可行性、影响医疗保健过程的因素以及医疗保健中遇到的瓶颈。可行性通过就诊患者数量、儿科医务人员的支持以及患者参与的意愿来确定。影响医疗保健过程的因素包括父母对疾病的了解程度、疾病严重程度的感知、努力程度、语言技能、健康素养、治疗依从性以及医疗保健过程中的瓶颈。此外,还分析了 MOC 之前、期间和之后几年内儿童到 POPD 的就诊次数和就诊次数。
2006 年,共为 189 名少数民族儿童提供了服务。MOC 融入医院的普通 POPD 是可行的。父母说和理解荷兰语的能力为 58%,功能健康素养为 88%;父母对疾病的充分了解和对疾病严重程度的感知分别为 59%和 67%。医疗保健过程中的主要瓶颈:父母对疾病的了解不足、对疾病严重程度的感知有限以及健康素养低,事实证明这些是降低治疗依从性的最佳预测因素。参加 MOC 后,哮喘患儿的 POPD 就诊次数和入院次数减少,而糖尿病患儿的就诊次数增加,代谢疾病患儿的失约次数减少。
MOC 融入普通 POPD 是可行的,受到家长的欢迎,更深入地了解少数民族儿童及其家长面临的问题,并为优化这些儿童的治疗依从性提供了有希望的方向。