Rutebemberwa Elizeus, Bagonza James, Tweheyo Raymond
Department of Health Policy, Planning and Management, Makerere University School of Public Health, Kampala, Uganda.
African Centre for Health and Environmental Studies, Kampala, Uganda.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 Jan 14;19(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-3873-z.
Prompt access to appropriate treatment reduces early onset of complications to chronic illnesses. Our objective was to document the health providers that patients with diabetes in rural areas seek treatment from before reaching hospitals.
Patients attending diabetic clinics in two hospitals of Iganga and Bugiri in rural Eastern Uganda were asked the health providers they went to for treatment before they started attending the diabetic clinics at these hospitals. An exploratory sequential data analysis was used to evaluate the sequential pattern of the types of providers whom patients went to and how they transitioned from one type of provider to another.
Out of 496 patients assessed, 248 (50.0%) went first to hospitals, 104 (21.0%) to private clinics, 73 (14.7%) to health centres, 44 (8.9%) to drug shops and 27 (5.4%) to other types of providers like community health workers, neighbours and traditional healers. However, a total of 295 (59.5%) went to a second provider, 99 (20.0%) to a third, 32 (6.5%) to a fourth and 15 (3.0%) to a fifth before being enrolled in the hospitals' diabetic clinics. Although community health workers, drug shops and household neighbours were utilized by 65 (13.1%) patients for treatment first, nobody went to these as a second provider. Instead patients went to hospitals, private clinics and health centres with very few patients going to herbalists. There is no clear pathway from one type of provider to another.
Patients consult many types of providers before appropriate medical care is received. Communities need to be sensitized on seeking care early from hospitals. Health centres and private clinics need to be equipped to manage diabetes or at least diagnose it and refer patients to hospitals early enough since some patients go to these health centres first for treatment.
及时获得适当治疗可减少慢性病并发症的早期发生。我们的目标是记录农村地区糖尿病患者在前往医院之前寻求治疗的医疗服务提供者。
询问乌干达东部农村地区伊甘加和布吉里两家医院糖尿病诊所的患者,在他们开始在这些医院的糖尿病诊所就诊之前,他们前往哪些医疗服务提供者处接受治疗。采用探索性序列数据分析来评估患者就诊的医疗服务提供者类型的序列模式,以及他们如何从一种类型的提供者转变为另一种类型。
在评估的496名患者中,248名(50.0%)首先前往医院,104名(21.0%)前往私人诊所,73名(14.7%)前往健康中心,44名(8.9%)前往药店,27名(5.4%)前往其他类型的提供者,如社区卫生工作者、邻居和传统治疗师。然而,共有295名(59.5%)患者在进入医院糖尿病诊所之前还去了第二位提供者处,99名(20.0%)去了第三位,32名(6.5%)去了第四位,15名(3.0%)去了第五位。尽管65名(13.1%)患者首先利用社区卫生工作者、药店和邻居进行治疗,但没有人将这些作为第二位提供者。相反,患者前往医院、私人诊所和健康中心,只有极少数患者去看草药医生。从一种类型的提供者到另一种类型没有明确的途径。
患者在获得适当医疗护理之前会咨询多种类型的提供者。需要提高社区对尽早到医院就医的认识。健康中心和私人诊所需要具备管理糖尿病的能力,或者至少能够诊断糖尿病并尽早将患者转诊至医院,因为一些患者首先会去这些健康中心接受治疗。