Boston College, Boston, Massachusetts.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston Massachusetts and Universidad Iberoamericana, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2019 Oct;71(10):1379-1386. doi: 10.1002/acr.23742. Epub 2019 Aug 13.
Persons who reside in low- and middle-income countries often have insufficient resources to pay for treatments prescribed for their medical conditions. The aim of this study was to determine, using qualitative methods, how patients with arthritis in the Dominican Republic manage the costs associated with chronic illnesses.
We conducted individual interviews with 17 Dominican adults with advanced arthritis who were undergoing total knee replacement or total hip replacement at a hospital in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Interviewers followed a moderator's guide with questions pertaining to the financial demands of arthritis treatment and the strategies participants used to pay for treatments. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim, and translated into English. We used thematic analysis to identify salient themes.
The thematic analysis suggested that health system factors (such as the extent of reimbursement for medications available in the public health care system) along with personal factors (such as disposable income) shaped individuals' experiences of managing chronic illness. These systemic and personal factors contributed to a sizeable gap between the cost of care and the amount most participants were able to pay. Participants managed this resource gap using a spectrum of strategies ranging from acceptance (or, "making do with less") to resourcefulness (or, "finding more"). Participants were aided by strong community bonds and religiously oriented resilience.
This qualitative study illuminates the range of strategies Dominican individuals with limited resources use to obtain health care and manage chronic illness. The findings raise hypotheses that warrant further study and could help guide provider-patient conversations regarding treatment adherence.
居住在中低收入国家的人往往没有足够的资源来支付为其医疗状况开具的治疗费用。本研究的目的是使用定性方法确定多米尼加共和国的关节炎患者如何管理与慢性病相关的成本。
我们对 17 名在多米尼加共和国圣多明各的一家医院接受全膝关节置换术或全髋关节置换术的晚期关节炎成年患者进行了个体访谈。访谈者遵循一份与关节炎治疗的财务需求以及参与者用于支付治疗费用的策略相关的问题的主持人指南进行访谈。采访进行了录音、逐字记录,并翻译成英文。我们使用主题分析来确定突出的主题。
主题分析表明,健康系统因素(例如,公共医疗保健系统中可用药物的报销程度)以及个人因素(例如,可支配收入)影响了个人管理慢性疾病的体验。这些系统因素和个人因素导致了护理费用与大多数参与者能够支付的费用之间存在相当大的差距。参与者使用一系列策略来管理这种资源差距,从接受(或“凑合”)到足智多谋(或“找到更多”)。参与者得益于强大的社区联系和以宗教为导向的适应能力。
这项定性研究阐明了多米尼加资源有限的个人获得医疗保健和管理慢性疾病的一系列策略。研究结果提出了需要进一步研究的假设,并可能有助于指导医患之间关于治疗依从性的对话。