School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, South Africa.
School of Pharmacy, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, South Africa.
BMC Fam Pract. 2017 Aug 24;18(1):82. doi: 10.1186/s12875-017-0655-8.
Missed appointments serve as a key indicator for adherence to therapy and as such, identifying patient reasons for this inconsistency could assist in developing programmes to improve health outcomes. In this article, we explore the reasons for missed appointments linked to a centralised dispensing system in South Africa. This system dispenses pre-packed, patient-specific medication parcels for clinically stable patients to health facilities. However, at least 8%-12% of about 300,000 parcels are not collected each month. This article aims to establish whether missed appointments for collection of medicine parcels are indicative of loss-to-follow-up and also to characterise the patient and health system factors linked to missed appointments.
We applied an exploratory mixed-methods design in two overlapping research phases. This involved in-depth interviews to yield healthcare practitioners' and patients' experiences and medical record reviews. Data collection was conducted during the period 2014-2015. Qualitative data were analysed through a hybrid process of inductive and deductive thematic analysis which integrated data-driven and theory-driven codes. Data from medical records (N = 89) were analysed in MS excel using both descriptive statistics and textual descriptions.
Review of medical records suggests that the majority of patients (67%) who missed original appointments later presented voluntarily to obtain medicines. This could indicate a temporal effect of some barriers. The remaining 33% revealed a range of CDU implementation issues resulting from, among others, erroneous classification of patients as defaulters. Interviews with patients revealed the following reasons for missed appointments: temporary migration, forgetting appointments, work commitments and temporary switch to private care. Most healthcare practitioners confirmed these barriers to collection but perceived that some were beyond the scope of health services. In addition, healthcare practitioners also identified a lack of patient responsibility, under-utilisation of medicines and use of plural healthcare sources (e.g. traditional healers) as contributing to missed appointments.
We suggest developing a patient care model reflecting the local context, attention to improving CDU's implementation processes and strengthening information systems in order to improve patient monitoring. This model presents lessons for other low-and-middle income countries with increasing need for dispensing of medicines for chronic illnesses.
失约是衡量患者对治疗依从性的一个重要指标,因此,找出患者失约的原因有助于制定改善健康结果的方案。本文探讨了南非集中配药系统中与失约相关的原因。该系统为临床稳定的患者向各卫生机构发放预先包装好的、特定于患者的药物包裹,但每月约有 30 万包裹中至少有 8%-12%未被领取。本文旨在确定未按时领取药包是否表明患者失去随访,以及描述与失约相关的患者和卫生系统因素。
我们在两个重叠的研究阶段应用了探索性混合方法设计。这包括深入访谈以获得医疗保健从业者和患者的经验以及病历审查。数据收集于 2014-2015 年期间进行。定性数据分析采用了归纳和演绎主题分析的混合过程,其中整合了数据驱动和理论驱动的代码。使用 MS excel 对病历(N=89)中的数据进行了分析,使用了描述性统计和文字描述。
病历审查表明,大多数失约的患者(67%)后来自愿出现以获取药物。这可能表明一些障碍存在时间效应。其余 33%的患者存在一系列 CDU 实施问题,除其他外,还包括错误地将患者分类为违约者。对患者的访谈揭示了失约的原因:临时迁移、忘记预约、工作承诺以及临时转向私人护理。大多数医疗保健从业者证实了这些取药障碍,但认为有些障碍超出了卫生服务的范围。此外,医疗保健从业者还确定了患者缺乏责任感、药物利用不足以及使用多种医疗保健来源(如传统治疗师)是导致失约的原因。
我们建议制定一种反映当地情况的患者护理模式,关注改进 CDU 的实施流程,并加强信息系统,以改善患者监测。该模式为其他中低收入国家提供了借鉴,这些国家越来越需要分发慢性病药物。