Porter James D, Bresick Graham
Madwaleni Hospital, Walter Sisulu University.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med. 2017 Jun 29;9(1):e1-e9. doi: 10.4102/phcfm.v9i1.1219.
Person-centred, re-engineered primary health care (PHC) is a national and global priority. Faith-based health care is a significant provider of PHC in sub-Saharan Africa, but there is limited published data on the reasons for patient choice of faith-based health care, particularly in South Africa.
The primary objective was to determine and explore the reasons for patient choice of a faith-based primary care clinic over their local public sector primary care clinic, and secondarily to determine to what extent these reasons were influenced by demography.
The study was conducted at Jubilee Health Centre (JHC), a faith-based primary care clinic attached to Jubilee Community Church in Cape Town, South Africa.
Focus groups, using the nominal group technique, were conducted with JHC patients and used to generate ranked reasons for attending the clinic. These were collated into the top 15 reasons and incorporated into a quantitative questionnaire which was administered to adult patients attending JHC.
A total of 164 patients were surveyed (a response rate of 92.4%) of which 68.3% were female and 57.9% from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Of patients surveyed, 98.2% chose to attend JHC because 'the staff treat me with respect', 96.3% because 'the staff are friendly' and 96.3% because 'the staff take time to listen to me'. The reason 'it is a Christian clinic' was chosen by 70.1% of patients. 'The staff speak my home language' was given as a reason by 61.1% of DRC patients and 37.1% of South African patients. 'The clinic is close to me' was chosen by 66.6% of Muslims and 40.8% of Christians.
Patients chose to attend JHC (a faith-based primary care clinic) because of the quality of care received. They emphasised the staff-patient relationship and patient-centredness rather than the clinic's religious practices (prayer with patients). These findings may be important in informing efforts to improve public sector primary care.
以人为本、重新设计的初级卫生保健是一项国家和全球优先事项。基于信仰的卫生保健是撒哈拉以南非洲初级卫生保健的重要提供者,但关于患者选择基于信仰的卫生保健的原因,尤其是在南非,公开数据有限。
主要目标是确定并探究患者选择基于信仰的初级保健诊所而非当地公共部门初级保健诊所的原因,其次确定这些原因在多大程度上受人口统计学影响。
该研究在南非开普敦禧年社区教堂附属的基于信仰的初级保健诊所禧年健康中心(JHC)进行。
采用名义小组技术对JHC患者进行焦点小组讨论,以生成患者选择就诊该诊所的排序原因。这些原因被整理成前15个原因,并纳入一份定量问卷,该问卷发放给在JHC就诊的成年患者。
共调查了164名患者(回复率为92.4%),其中68.3%为女性,57.9%来自刚果民主共和国(DRC)。在接受调查的患者中,98.2%选择就诊JHC是因为“工作人员尊重我”,96.3%是因为“工作人员很友好”,96.3%是因为“工作人员花时间倾听我”。70.1%的患者选择“这是一家基督教诊所”作为原因。61.1%的刚果民主共和国患者和37.1%的南非患者将“工作人员说我的母语”作为原因。66.6%的穆斯林患者和40.8%的基督教患者选择“诊所离我近”。
患者选择就诊JHC(一家基于信仰的初级保健诊所)是因为所接受的护理质量。他们强调医患关系和以患者为中心,而非诊所的宗教活动(与患者一起祈祷)。这些发现可能对改进公共部门初级保健的努力具有重要意义。