Rahimi Asa, Kassam Rosemin, Dang Zhong, Sekiwunga Richard
BSc (Hons). Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia. Vancouver, BC (Canada).
BSc Pharm, ACPR, PharmD, PhD. Professor. School of Population and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia. Vancouver, BC (Canada).
Pharm Pract (Granada). 2019 Oct-Dec;17(4):1622. doi: 10.18549/PharmPract.2019.4.1622. Epub 2019 Dec 4.
A qualitative study was conducted to gain insight into challenges reported by Butaleja households during a previous household survey. Specifically, this paper discusses heads of households' and caregivers' perceptions of challenges they face when seeking care for their very young children with fever presumed to be malaria.
Eleven focus groups (FGs) were carried out with household members (five with heads of households and six with household caregivers) residing in five sub-counties located across the district. Purposive sampling was used to ensure the sample represented the religious diversity and geographical distance from the peri-urban center of the district. Each FG consisted of five to six participants. The FGs were conducted at a community centre by two pairs of researchers residing in the district and who were fluent in both English and the local dialect of Lunyole. The discussions were recorded, translated, and transcribed. Transcripts were reviewed and coded with the assistance of QDA Miner (version 4.0) qualitative data management software, and analyzed using thematic content analysis.
The FG discussions identified four major areas of challenges when managing acute febrile illness in their child under the age of five with presumed malaria (1) difficulties with getting to public health facilities due to long geographical distances and lack of affordable transportation; (2) poor service once at a public health facility, including denial of care, delay in treatment, and negative experiences with the staff; (3) difficulties with managing the child's illness at home, including challenges with keeping home-stock medicines and administering medicines as prescribed; and (4) constrained to use private outlets despite their shortcomings.
Future interventions may need to look beyond the public health system to improve case management of childhood malaria at the community level in rural districts such as Butaleja. Given the difficulties with accessing quality private health outlets, there is a need to partner with the private sector to explore feasible models of community-based health insurance programs and expand the role of informal private providers.
开展一项定性研究,以深入了解布塔莱贾家庭在之前的家庭调查中报告的挑战。具体而言,本文讨论了户主和照料者在为疑似患有疟疾发热的幼儿寻求护理时对所面临挑战的看法。
与居住在该地区五个乡的家庭成员进行了11次焦点小组讨论(5次与户主进行,6次与家庭照料者进行)。采用目的抽样法以确保样本代表该地区的宗教多样性以及与城郊中心的地理距离。每个焦点小组由五至六名参与者组成。焦点小组讨论在社区中心由两对居住在该地区且精通英语和当地卢尼奥勒方言的研究人员进行。讨论内容进行了录音、翻译和转录。转录文本在QDA Miner(4.0版)定性数据管理软件的协助下进行了审查和编码,并采用主题内容分析法进行了分析。
焦点小组讨论确定了在管理五岁以下疑似患有疟疾的儿童急性发热疾病时面临的四个主要挑战领域:(1)由于地理距离远和缺乏负担得起的交通工具,前往公共卫生设施困难;(2)到达公共卫生设施后服务质量差,包括被拒绝护理、治疗延误以及与工作人员的负面经历;(3)在家中管理孩子疾病困难,包括储备家庭用药和按规定给药方面的挑战;(4)尽管私人诊所存在缺点,但仍被迫使用。
未来的干预措施可能需要超越公共卫生系统,以改善布塔莱贾等农村地区社区层面儿童疟疾的病例管理。鉴于获得优质私人卫生服务存在困难,有必要与私营部门合作,探索可行的社区医疗保险计划模式,并扩大非正式私人提供者的作用。