Owusu-Ansah Frances E, Tagbor Harry, Togbe Mabel Afi
Department of Behavioural Sciences, School of Medical Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med. 2016 Mar 29;8(1):e1-7. doi: 10.4102/phcfm.v8i1.822.
Rapid rural-urban migration of people to cities is a reality around the globe that has increased city slum dwellers. Sodom and Gomorrah is a city slum located in the heart of Accra, Ghana. Like other slums, it lacks basic amenities necessary for dwellers' quality of life. This study describes residents' access to health and factors associated with the use of healthcarefacilities.
Questionnaires were administered in systematically selected shacks across the entire slum. Data on demographic characteristics, existent health facilities and number of users, health-insured residents and knowledge of common diseases were collected.
Majority of the residents were from the northern parts of Ghana, relative to the south and a few of them come from other parts of West Africa. Seventy-one percent of residents had never visited a health facility in the last 5 years. When necessary, they access health care from drug stores (61.1%) or hospitals (33.1%). Residents' age, educational status, income, health knowledge and membership of National Health Insurance Scheme were significantly (p < 0.05) associated with the use of healthcare facilities. Younger residents and those without National Health Insurance Scheme membership, formal education, no knowledge of common illnesses and regular income were significantly less likely to use a healthcare facility. For most residents, neither distance (73.2%) nor transportation to health facilities was a problem (74.1%).
Conditions of profound environmental hazards, overcrowding, poor-quality housing and lack of health care in Sodom and Gomorrah pose grave threats to the health of the inhabitants. Multisectoral interventions and resource mobilisation championed by the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development are needed to alter the trend.
全球范围内,人口从农村向城市的快速迁移已成为现实,这使得城市贫民窟居民数量增加。所多玛和蛾摩拉是位于加纳阿克拉市中心的一个城市贫民窟。与其他贫民窟一样,这里缺乏居民高质量生活所需的基本便利设施。本研究描述了居民获得医疗服务的情况以及与使用医疗设施相关的因素。
在整个贫民窟系统选取的棚屋中进行问卷调查。收集了有关人口统计学特征、现有卫生设施及其使用人数、有医保的居民以及常见疾病知识等数据。
大多数居民来自加纳北部,相对南部而言,还有少数来自西非其他地区。71%的居民在过去5年中从未去过医疗机构。必要时,他们从药店(61.1%)或医院(33.1%)获得医疗服务。居民的年龄、教育程度、收入、健康知识以及国家健康保险计划的参保情况与医疗设施的使用显著相关(p < 0.05)。较年轻的居民以及未参加国家健康保险计划、未接受正规教育、不了解常见疾病且没有固定收入的居民使用医疗设施的可能性显著较低。对大多数居民来说,距离(73.2%)和前往医疗设施的交通(74.1%)都不是问题。
所多玛和蛾摩拉存在严重的环境危害、过度拥挤、住房质量差以及缺乏医疗服务等状况,对居民健康构成严重威胁。需要地方政府和农村发展部倡导的多部门干预和资源调动来改变这一趋势。