Phalkey Revati K, Kroll Mareike, Dutta Sayani, Shukla Sharvari, Butsch Carsten, Bharucha Erach, Kraas Frauke
Institute of Geography, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Division of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Nottingham, City Hospital, Nottingham, United Kingdom;
Glob Health Action. 2015 Oct 1;8:28413. doi: 10.3402/gha.v8.28413. eCollection 2015.
Participation of private practitioners in routine disease surveillance in India is minimal despite the fact that they account for over 70% of the primary healthcare provision. We aimed to investigate the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of private practitioners in the city of Pune toward disease surveillance. Our goal was to identify what barriers and facilitators determine their participation in current and future surveillance efforts.
A questionnaire-based survey was conducted among 258 practitioners (response rate 86%). Data were processed using SPSS™ Inc., Chicago, IL, USA, version 17.0.1.
Knowledge regarding surveillance, although limited, was better among allopathy practitioners. Surveillance practices did not differ significantly between allopathy and alternate medicine practitioners. Multivariable logistic regression suggested practicing allopathy [odds ratio (OR) 3.125, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.234-7.915, p=0.016] and availability of a computer (OR 3.670, 95% CI 1.237-10.889, p=0.019) as significant determinants and the presence of a laboratory (OR 3.792, 95% CI 0.998-14.557, p=0.052) as a marginal determinant of the practitioner's willingness to participate in routine disease surveillance systems. Lack of time (137, 55%) was identified as the main barrier at the individual level alongside inadequately trained subordinate staff (14, 6%). Main extrinsic barriers included lack of cooperation between government and the private sector (27, 11%) and legal issues involved in reporting data (15, 6%). There was a general agreement among respondents (239, 94%) that current surveillance efforts need strengthening. Over a third suggested that availability of detailed information and training about surveillance processes (70, 33%) would facilitate reporting.
The high response rate and the practitioners' willingness to participate in a proposed pilot non-communicable disease surveillance system indicate that there is a general interest from the private sector in cooperating. Keeping reporting systems simple, preferably in electronic formats that minimize infrastructure and time requirements on behalf of the private practitioners, will go a long way in consolidating disease surveillance efforts in the state. Organizing training sessions, providing timely feedback, and awarding continuing medical education points for routine data reporting seem feasible options and should be piloted.
尽管印度的私人执业医生提供了超过70%的初级医疗保健服务,但他们在常规疾病监测中的参与度却极低。我们旨在调查浦那市私人执业医生对疾病监测的知识、态度和做法。我们的目标是确定哪些障碍和促进因素决定了他们参与当前和未来的监测工作。
对258名执业医生进行了基于问卷的调查(回复率86%)。数据使用美国伊利诺伊州芝加哥市SPSS™公司的17.0.1版本进行处理。
尽管对监测的了解有限,但在采用对抗疗法的执业医生中情况稍好。采用对抗疗法和替代医学的执业医生在监测做法上没有显著差异。多变量逻辑回归表明,采用对抗疗法(优势比[OR]3.125,95%置信区间[CI]1.234 - 7.915,p = 0.016)和拥有一台计算机(OR 3.670,95%CI 1.237 - 10.889,p = 0.019)是执业医生愿意参与常规疾病监测系统的重要决定因素,而拥有一个实验室(OR 3.792,95%CI 0.998 - 14.557,p = 0.052)是边缘决定因素。在个人层面,缺乏时间(137人,55%)被确定为主要障碍,其次是下属工作人员培训不足(14人,6%)。主要的外部障碍包括政府与私营部门之间缺乏合作(27人,11%)以及数据报告涉及的法律问题(15人,6%)。受访者中普遍达成共识(239人,94%),认为当前的监测工作需要加强。超过三分之一的人建议提供关于监测流程的详细信息和培训(70人,33%)将有助于报告。
高回复率以及执业医生参与拟议的非传染性疾病监测试点系统的意愿表明,私营部门普遍有合作的兴趣。保持报告系统简单,最好采用电子格式,以尽量减少私营执业医生的基础设施和时间要求,这将大大有助于巩固该邦的疾病监测工作。组织培训课程、及时提供反馈以及为常规数据报告授予继续医学教育学分似乎是可行的选择,应该进行试点。