Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA
School of Medicine, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open. 2019 Oct 28;9(10):e031525. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-031525.
The aim of this study was to characterise the resources and challenges for surgical care and referrals at health centres (HCs) in South Wollo Zone, Ethiopia.
Eight primary HCs in South Wollo Zone, Ethiopia.
Eight health officers and nurses staffing eight HCs completed a survey.
The study was a survey-based, cross-sectional assessment of HCs in South Wollo Zone, Ethiopia and data were collected over a 30-day period from November 2014 to January 2015.
Survey assessed human and material resources, diagnostic capabilities and challenges and patient-reported barriers to care.
Eight HCs had an average of 18 providers each, the majority of which were nurses (62.2%) and health officers (20.7%). HCs had intermittent availability of clean water, nasogastric tubes, rectal tubes and suturing materials, none of them had any form of imaging. A total of 168 surgical patients were seen at the 8 HCs; 58% were referred for surgery. Most common diagnoses were trauma/burns (42%) and need for caesarean section (9%). Of those who did not receive surgery, 32 patients reported specific barriers to obtaining care (91.4%). The most common specific barriers were patients not being decision makers to have surgery, lack of family/social support and inability to afford hospital fees.
HCs in South Wollo Zone, Ethiopia are well-staffed with nurses and health officers, however they face a number of diagnostic and treatment challenges due to lack of material resources. Many patients requiring surgery receive initial diagnosis and care at HCs; sociocultural and financial factors commonly prohibit these patients from receiving surgery. Further study is needed to determine how such delays may impact patient outcomes. Improving material resources at HCs and exploring community and family perceptions of surgery may enable more streamlined access to surgical care and prevent delays.
本研究旨在描述埃塞俄比亚南沃洛州卫生中心(HCs)的外科护理资源和挑战。
埃塞俄比亚南沃洛州的 8 个初级 HCs。
8 名卫生官员和护士在 8 个 HCs 完成了一项调查。
该研究是对埃塞俄比亚南沃洛州 HCs 的一项基于调查的横断面评估,数据收集于 2014 年 11 月至 2015 年 1 月的 30 天内。
调查评估了人力资源和物质资源、诊断能力和挑战以及患者报告的护理障碍。
8 个 HCs 平均每个 HC 有 18 名医护人员,其中大多数是护士(62.2%)和卫生官员(20.7%)。HCs 间歇性地提供清洁水、鼻胃管、直肠管和缝合材料,但都没有任何形式的影像学检查。8 个 HCs 共收治了 168 例外科患者,其中 58%被转诊接受手术。最常见的诊断是创伤/烧伤(42%)和需要剖宫产(9%)。在未接受手术的患者中,有 32 名患者报告了具体的获得护理的障碍(91.4%)。最常见的具体障碍是患者不是手术的决策者、缺乏家庭/社会支持以及无力承担医院费用。
埃塞俄比亚南沃洛州的 HCs 配备了充足的护士和卫生官员,但由于缺乏物质资源,他们面临着许多诊断和治疗挑战。许多需要手术的患者在 HCs 接受初步诊断和治疗;社会文化和经济因素通常阻止这些患者接受手术。需要进一步研究以确定这种延迟如何影响患者的结局。改善 HCs 的物质资源并探索社区和家庭对手术的看法,可能使获得外科护理的途径更加顺畅,并防止延迟。