Mahato Preeti K, Paudel Giridhari Sharma
Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Bournemouth University, Bournemouth, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
United Nations Development Programme/National Planning Commission, Kathmandu, Nepal.
WHO South East Asia J Public Health. 2015 Jul-Dec;4(2):167-175. doi: 10.4103/2224-3151.206686.
Nepal is an underdeveloped country in which half of the total health expenditure is from out-of-pocket payments. Thus, the Government of Nepal introduced universal free health-care services up to the level of district hospitals, and targeted these services to poor and marginalized people in regional and subregional hospitals. The aim of this descriptive study was to explore the implementation and utilization of free health-care services by the target population (poor and marginalized people) in two tertiary-care hospitals in western Nepal, one with a social care unit (Western Regional Hospital) and one without a social care unit (Lumbini Zonal Hospital).
Medical records maintained by the two hospitals for one Nepali calendar year were collected and analysed, along with information from key informant interviews with staff from each hospital and patient exit interviews.
Utilization of free health-care services by poor and marginalized people in the two tertiary-care hospitals was suboptimal: only 8.4% of patients using services were exempted from payment in Western Regional Hospital, whereas it was even fewer, at 2.7%, in Lumbini Zonal Hospital. There was also unintended use of services by nontarget people. Qualitative analysis indicated a lack of awareness of free health-care services among clients, and lack of awareness regarding target groups among staff at the hospitals. Importantly, many services were utilized by people from rural areas adjoining the district in which the hospital was situated.
Utilization of free health-care services by the target population in the two tertiary-care hospitals was very low. This was the result of poor dissemination of information about the free health-care programme by the hospitals to the target population, and also a lack of knowledge regarding free services and target groups among staff working in these hospitals. Thus, it is imperative to implement educational programmes for hospital staff and for poor and marginalized people. Unintended use of free services was also seen by nontarget groups; this suggests that there should further simplification of the process to identify target groups.
尼泊尔是一个欠发达国家,其卫生总支出的一半来自自付费用。因此,尼泊尔政府在地区医院层面推出了全民免费医疗服务,并将这些服务针对地区和次地区医院中的贫困和边缘化人群。这项描述性研究的目的是探讨尼泊尔西部两家三级医疗医院中目标人群(贫困和边缘化人群)对免费医疗服务的实施和利用情况,其中一家设有社会护理单元(西部区域医院),另一家没有社会护理单元(蓝毗尼地区医院)。
收集并分析了两家医院在一个尼泊尔日历年中保存的病历,以及与每家医院工作人员进行的关键 informant 访谈和患者出院访谈的信息。
两家三级医疗医院中贫困和边缘化人群对免费医疗服务的利用情况并不理想:在西部区域医院,只有 8.4% 使用服务的患者被免除费用,而在蓝毗尼地区医院这一比例更低,仅为 2.7%。非目标人群也存在对服务的意外使用情况。定性分析表明,服务对象对免费医疗服务缺乏了解,医院工作人员对目标群体也缺乏认识。重要的是,许多服务被医院所在地区毗邻农村地区的人们所使用。
两家三级医疗医院中目标人群对免费医疗服务的利用率非常低。这是由于医院向目标人群传播免费医疗计划信息不力,以及这些医院工作人员对免费服务和目标群体缺乏了解所致。因此,必须为医院工作人员以及贫困和边缘化人群实施教育计划。非目标群体也出现了对免费服务的意外使用情况;这表明应进一步简化识别目标群体的流程。