Department of Business Administration, Gies College of Business, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, United States of America.
Indian Institute of Public Health, Gandhi Nagar, India.
PLoS One. 2019 Aug 1;14(8):e0220316. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220316. eCollection 2019.
The National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) was launched in India in 2005 to address the health needs of under-served populations in rural areas, and to support universal access to care. Despite this initiative, unaccredited informal providers (IPs) often remain patients' first point of contact, which has led to inconsistencies in treatment, and has compromised the quality of care.
To explore the factors that influence patients' decisions about healthcare providers in rural areas of central India.
Nine focus group discussions (FGDs) were held in nine villages in central India. Framework analysis using an inductive approach was used to analyse the data.
The crosscutting theme across the discussions was not choice but need-the need for affordable and accessible health care regardless of the provider's qualification. Results highlighted that IPs play a pivotal role in villagers' lives. Formal healthcare services were accessed infrequently, and mainly when a condition was judged severe or possibly even fatal. Even then, affordability was carefully weighed. Villagers' distance from formal providers contributed to high cost and low preference of formal providers. When opting for IPs, familiarity and trust were more important to villagers than qualifications. IPs have operated in rural communities in India for a long time and have adapted their services to meet the needs, preferences, social norms, and economic conditions of villagers.
IPs have captured a niche and are often the first contact point in rural settings even when patients ultimately are diagnosed and treated by trained doctors. Merely tackling the undersupply of qualified doctors is not effective or sufficient to impact on the rural healthcare system: the strong and prevalent influence of IPs needs to be addressed also.
国家农村健康使命(NRHM)于 2005 年在印度启动,旨在满足农村地区服务不足人群的健康需求,并支持普遍获得医疗服务。尽管有了这一举措,未经认证的非正规提供者(IP)仍然是患者的首要接触点,这导致了治疗的不一致,并损害了医疗服务的质量。
探讨影响印度中部农村地区患者选择医疗服务提供者的因素。
在印度中部的 9 个村庄进行了 9 次焦点小组讨论(FGD)。使用归纳法的框架分析方法对数据进行分析。
讨论的贯穿主题不是选择,而是需求——无论提供者的资格如何,都需要负担得起和可获得的医疗保健。结果突出表明,IP 在村民的生活中起着关键作用。村民很少去正规医疗机构,主要是在病情被判断为严重甚至可能致命时。即便如此,也要仔细权衡费用问题。村民与正规医疗机构的距离导致了对正规医疗机构的高成本和低偏好。当选择 IP 时,村民更看重熟悉度和信任,而不是资格。IP 在印度农村社区已经运作了很长时间,他们已经调整了他们的服务,以满足村民的需求、偏好、社会规范和经济条件。
IP 已经占据了一个利基市场,即使患者最终由经过培训的医生诊断和治疗,他们也往往是农村地区的第一接触点。仅仅解决合格医生的供应不足问题对于影响农村医疗体系来说是无效或不充分的:还需要解决 IP 强大而普遍的影响力。