a Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery , Northwestern University , Chicago , IL , USA.
b Program in Global Surgery and Social Change , Harvard Medical School , Boston , MA , USA.
Glob Health Action. 2019;12(1):1599541. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2019.1599541.
BACKGROUND: Limited access to safe, timely banked blood is a critical barrier to providing basic surgical care in resource-limited settings globally. Contextual, locally driven data are required to elucidate country needs, develop effective interventions, and guide policy decisions. OBJECTIVE: We employ qualitative methodology to describe barriers faced and solutions proposed by front-line obstetric providers in Bihar - a poor, populous Indian state where maternal mortality exceeds the national average. We aim to make locally driven recommendations for ongoing policy work in India to strengthen the country's blood transfusion system. METHODS: From February to May 2016, two researchers conducted semi-structured interviews with 19 obstetric providers across Bihar. Snowball sampling was employed until thematic saturation was reached. Following immersion into de-identified texts and dual codebook development, a primary analyst completed topical coding, and a secondary analyst confirmed reproducibility. RESULTS: Providers report that pervasive banked blood shortages force hospitals to require replacement donation, but patients' families often cannot or will not donate. Providers wait one to six hours for blood, depending on availability of staff and supplies, blood bank proximity, and the ability of the patient being treated to navigate the system. Providers feel forced to refer their patients, often to distant, poorly equipped centers. Providers identify donor education, improved infrastructure, and improved local coordination as focus areas for intervention. CONCLUSIONS: A multi-stakeholder approach that aims to increase blood donation through community education, mitigate limited infrastructure through short-term workarounds, and improve local-level coordination through state support and policy change is required in Bihar. This study generates data to guide policy and future research aimed at generating affordable, contextually appropriate interventions to the blood drought.
背景:在资源有限的环境中,安全、及时的血库供应有限,这是提供基本外科护理的一个关键障碍。需要有针对性、由当地驱动的数据来阐明国家的需求、制定有效的干预措施,并指导政策决策。
目的:我们采用定性方法描述了印度比哈尔邦一线产科医务人员所面临的障碍和提出的解决方案,该邦是一个贫穷、人口众多的印度邦,其产妇死亡率高于全国平均水平。我们旨在为印度正在进行的政策工作提供具有地方特色的建议,以加强该国的输血系统。
方法:2016 年 2 月至 5 月期间,两名研究人员对比哈尔邦的 19 名产科医务人员进行了半结构化访谈。采用滚雪球抽样法,直至达到主题饱和。在对去识别文本进行沉浸式处理和双代码本开发之后,主要分析员完成了主题编码,二级分析员确认了可重复性。
结果:提供者报告说,普遍存在的血库短缺迫使医院要求替代捐赠,但患者的家属往往无法或不愿意捐赠。提供者等待血液的时间为 1 至 6 小时,具体取决于工作人员和供应品的可用性、血库的距离以及接受治疗的患者在系统中的导航能力。提供者感到被迫将患者转介到遥远、设备简陋的中心。提供者确定了捐赠者教育、改善基础设施和改善地方协调作为干预的重点领域。
结论:在比哈尔邦,需要采取多利益攸关方的方法,通过社区教育增加献血,通过短期权宜之计减轻有限的基础设施,通过州级支持和政策改革改善地方一级的协调。这项研究提供了数据,以指导政策和未来的研究,旨在针对血液短缺问题制定负担得起的、符合当地情况的干预措施。
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2018-9-29
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2022-2-1
Dialogues Health. 2023-11-21
Public Health Ethics. 2022-9-21
Healthc (Amst). 2019-6
Healthc (Amst). 2019-6
BMJ Glob Health. 2017-5-18
BMJ Glob Health. 2017-5-24