Engel Nora, Davids Malika, Blankvoort Nadine, Dheda Keertan, Pant Pai Nitika, Pai Madhukar
Department of Health, Ethics & Society, Research School for Public Health and Primary Care, Maastricht University, Postbus 616, NL - 6200, MD, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Lung Infection and Division of pulmonology and UCT lung Institute Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Anzio Road, Cape Town, 7925, South Africa.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Jun 17;17(1):408. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2353-6.
Point of care testing promises to reduce delays in diagnosing and initiating treatment for infectious diseases such as Human Immuno-deficiency Virus (HIV). In South Africa, decentralized HIV testing with rapid tests offers important lessons for point of care testing programs. Yet, little is known about the strategies of providers and clients to make HIV testing successful in settings short of equipment, human resources and space. We aimed at examining these strategies.
This paper is based on a larger qualitative study of diagnostic practices across major diseases and actors in homes, clinics, communities, hospitals and laboratories in South Africa. We conducted 101 semi-structured interviews and 7 focus group discussions with doctors, nurses, community health workers, patients, laboratory technicians, policymakers, hospital managers and manufacturers between September 2012 and June 2013 in Durban, Cape Town and Eastern Cape. The topics explored included diagnostic processes and challenges, understanding of diagnosis, and visions of ideal tests. For this paper, the data on HIV testing processes in clinics, communities and hospitals was used.
Strategies to make HIV testing work at point of care involve overcoming constraints in equipment, spaces, human resources and workload and actively managing diagnostic processes. We grouped these strategies into subthemes: maintaining relationships, adapting testing guidelines and practices to stock-outs, to physical space, and to different clients, turning the test into a tool to reach another aim and turning the testing process into a tool to enhance adherence. These adaptive strategies are locally negotiated solutions, often ad-hoc, depending on personal commitment, relationships, human resources, physical space and referral systems. In the process, testing is redefined and repurposed. Not all of these repurposing acts are successful in ensuring a timely diagnosis. Some lead to disruptions, unnecessary testing or delays with at times unclear implications for quality of diagnosis.
Tests shape relationships, professional roles and practices of users at point of care. At the same time, testing processes are dynamic and test results and processes take on new meanings for clients and providers. These insights are crucial for understanding the contexts within which diagnostic devices and policies need to function.
即时检验有望减少诸如人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)等传染病诊断及开始治疗方面的延误。在南非,采用快速检测进行的分散式HIV检测为即时检验项目提供了重要经验。然而,对于在缺乏设备、人力资源和空间的环境中使HIV检测取得成功的提供者和客户策略,人们了解甚少。我们旨在研究这些策略。
本文基于一项更大规模的定性研究,该研究涉及南非家庭、诊所、社区、医院和实验室中主要疾病及相关行为者的诊断实践。2012年9月至2013年6月期间,我们在德班、开普敦和东开普对医生、护士、社区卫生工作者、患者、实验室技术人员、政策制定者、医院管理人员和制造商进行了101次半结构化访谈和7次焦点小组讨论。探讨的主题包括诊断过程和挑战、对诊断的理解以及理想检测的愿景。本文使用了诊所、社区和医院中HIV检测过程的数据。
在即时检验环境中使HIV检测发挥作用的策略包括克服设备、空间、人力资源和工作量方面的限制,并积极管理诊断过程。我们将这些策略归纳为子主题:维持关系、根据缺货情况、实际空间和不同客户调整检测指南及做法、将检测转变为实现另一目标的工具以及将检测过程转变为增强依从性的工具。这些适应性策略是根据个人承诺、关系、人力资源、实际空间和转诊系统在当地协商得出的解决方案,通常是临时的。在此过程中,检测被重新定义和重新定位。并非所有这些重新定位行为都能成功确保及时诊断。有些会导致混乱、不必要的检测或延误,有时对诊断质量的影响尚不清楚。
检测塑造了即时检验环境中使用者的关系、专业角色和实践。同时,检测过程是动态的,检测结果和过程对客户和提供者具有新的意义。这些见解对于理解诊断设备和政策需要发挥作用的背景至关重要。