School of Population Health, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Int J Evid Based Healthc. 2012 Dec;10(4):361-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1744-1609.2012.00294.x.
The aim of this research was to understand how health workers in developing countries reach diagnostic and treatment decisions. In developing countries, health workers are often forced to make diagnostic and treatment decisions based on limited knowledge, unhelpful information, infrequent and low technology back-up services and without the support of more senior staff. Yet patients continue to be treated. This paper investigates how primary healthcare workers in such contexts reach these diagnostic and treatment decisions.
Using a qualitative methodology, 58 primary healthcare workers from the three primary healthcare facilities in Papua New Guinea--aid posts, sub-health centres and health centres--participated in an in-depth interview, in order to investigate how diagnostic and treatment decisions were made.
Although participants were originally trained in the biomedical model, they lived and worked in a context where other belief systems operated to diagnose and treat illness. This led to the coexistence of at least three models of treatment: the biomedical model, traditional indigenous health practices and Christian beliefs. Thus, a homogenous biomedical understanding of health and well-being was not possible in this setting, and treatment options did not always follow the biomedical recommendations.
In developing countries where competing medical frame works exist, evidence-based practices may be more difficult to implement. Although the skill and knowledge of the provider and availability of treatment resources are still important, belief in the accuracy of the diagnosis and the potency of the treatment by the patient and the patient's community as well as the health provider may be just as significant.
本研究旨在了解发展中国家的卫生工作者如何做出诊断和治疗决策。在发展中国家,卫生工作者通常被迫根据有限的知识、无益的信息、不频繁和低技术的后备服务以及没有更高级别工作人员的支持做出诊断和治疗决策。然而,患者仍在接受治疗。本文调查了在这种情况下,初级卫生保健工作者如何做出这些诊断和治疗决策。
采用定性方法,来自巴布亚新几内亚的 3 个初级保健机构(援助站、次级卫生中心和卫生中心)的 58 名初级保健工作者参加了深度访谈,以调查诊断和治疗决策是如何做出的。
尽管参与者最初接受过生物医学模式的培训,但他们生活和工作在一个其他信仰体系也可以用于诊断和治疗疾病的环境中。这导致了至少三种治疗模式的共存:生物医学模式、传统的土著卫生实践和基督教信仰。因此,在这种环境中,不可能存在单一的生物医学健康和福祉理解,治疗方案并不总是遵循生物医学建议。
在存在竞争医疗框架的发展中国家,基于证据的实践可能更难实施。尽管提供者的技能和知识以及治疗资源的可用性仍然很重要,但患者及其社区以及卫生提供者对诊断准确性和治疗效果的信任可能同样重要。