Centre for Health Policy, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2017 Oct 18;15(1):90. doi: 10.1186/s12961-017-0255-z.
Focusing on healthcare referral processes for children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in South Africa, this paper discusses the comprehensiveness of documents (global and national) that guide the country's SAM healthcare. This research is relevant because South African studies on SAM mostly examine the implementation of WHO guidelines in hospitals, making their technical relevance to the country's lower level and referral healthcare system under-explored.
To add to both literature and methods for studying SAM healthcare, we critically appraised four child healthcare guidelines (global and national) and conducted complementary expert interviews (n = 5). Combining both methods enabled us to examine the comprehensiveness of the documents as related to guiding SAM healthcare within the country's referral system as well as the credibility (rigour and stakeholder representation) of the guideline documents' development process.
None of the guidelines appraised covered all steps of SAM referrals; however, each addressed certain steps thoroughly, apart from transit care. Our study also revealed that national documents were mostly modelled after WHO guidelines but were not explicitly adapted to local context. Furthermore, we found most guidelines' formulation processes to be unclear and stakeholder involvement in the process to be minimal.
In adapting guidelines for management of SAM in South Africa, it is important that local context applicability is taken into consideration. In doing this, wider stakeholder involvement is essential; this is important because factors that affect SAM management go beyond in-hospital care. Community, civil society, medical and administrative involvement during guideline formulation processes will enhance acceptability and adherence to the guidelines.
本文聚焦于南非儿童严重急性营养不良(SAM)的医疗转诊流程,讨论了指导该国 SAM 医疗的文件(全球和国家)的全面性。该研究具有相关性,因为南非关于 SAM 的研究大多集中在医院内实施世卫组织指南,而对该国较低层次的技术相关性和转诊医疗系统的研究则相对较少。
为了增加对 SAM 医疗保健的研究文献和方法,我们对四项儿童保健指南(全球和国家)进行了批判性评估,并进行了补充专家访谈(n=5)。两种方法的结合使我们能够检查文件的全面性,以指导国家转诊系统内的 SAM 医疗保健,以及指南文件制定过程的可信度(严谨性和利益相关者代表性)。
评估的指南中没有一个涵盖了 SAM 转诊的所有步骤;然而,除了转运护理外,每份指南都详细地涉及了某些步骤。我们的研究还表明,国家文件大多是仿照世卫组织指南制定的,但没有明确适应当地情况。此外,我们发现大多数指南的制定过程不明确,利益相关者的参与度很低。
在南非适应 SAM 管理指南时,必须考虑到当地情况的适用性。在这样做时,广泛的利益相关者参与是必不可少的;这很重要,因为影响 SAM 管理的因素超出了医院内护理。在指南制定过程中,社区、民间社会、医疗和行政部门的参与将提高指南的可接受性和遵守性。