College of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences, University of Sierra Leone, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Institute for Global Health and Development, Queen Margaret University Edinburgh, Musselburgh, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2020 Mar 2;5(2):e002024. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-002024. eCollection 2020.
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the leading cause of mortality globally. In Africa, they are expected to increase by 25% by 2030. However, very little is known about community perceptions of risk factors and factors influencing health-seeking behaviour, especially in fragile settings. Understanding these is critical to effectively address this epidemic, especially in low-resource settings.
We use participatory group model building techniques to probe knowledge and perceptions of NCD conditions and their causes, health-seeking patterns for NCDs and factors affecting these health-seeking patterns. Our participants were 116 local leaders and community members in three sites in Western Area (urban) and Bombali District (rural), Sierra Leone. Data were analysed using a prior framework for NCD care seeking developed in Ghana.
Our findings suggest adequate basic knowledge of causes and symptoms of the common NCDs, in rural and urban areas, although there is a tendency to highlight and react to severe symptoms. Urban and rural communities have access to a complex network of formal and informal, traditional and biomedical, spiritual and secular health providers. We highlight multiple narratives of causal factors which community members can hold, and how these and social networks influence their care seeking. Care seeking is influenced by a number of factors, including supply-side factors (proximity and cost), previous experiences of care, disease-specific factors, such as acute presentation, and personal and community beliefs about the appropriateness of different strategies.
This article adds to the limited literature on community understanding of NCDs and its associated health-seeking behaviour in fragile settings. It is important to further elucidate these factors, which power hybrid journeys including non-care seeking, failure to prevent and self-manage effectively, and considerable expenditure for households, in order to improve prevention and management of NCDs in fragile settings such as Sierra Leone.
非传染性疾病(NCDs)是全球死亡的主要原因。在非洲,到 2030 年,预计这一数字将增加 25%。然而,人们对风险因素和影响卫生服务利用行为的因素的社区认知知之甚少,尤其是在脆弱环境中。了解这些因素对于有效应对这一流行病至关重要,尤其是在资源匮乏的环境中。
我们使用参与式小组模型构建技术来探究 NCD 状况及其原因、NCD 卫生服务利用模式以及影响这些卫生服务利用模式的因素在社区中的认知。我们的参与者是塞拉利昂西部(城市)和邦巴利区(农村)三个地点的 116 名当地领导人和社区成员。数据使用在加纳开发的 NCD 护理寻求的先前框架进行分析。
我们的研究结果表明,农村和城市地区的人们对常见 NCD 的原因和症状有足够的基本了解,尽管人们倾向于突出和对严重症状做出反应。城乡社区都可以利用正式和非正式、传统和生物医学、精神和世俗的复杂网络来获得医疗服务。我们强调了社区成员可以持有的多种因果因素叙述,以及这些因素和社交网络如何影响他们的护理寻求。护理寻求受到多种因素的影响,包括供应方因素(接近程度和成本)、以前的护理经验、疾病特异性因素(如急性发作)以及个人和社区对不同策略的适当性的信念。
本文增加了关于脆弱环境中社区对 NCD 及其相关卫生服务利用行为的理解的有限文献。进一步阐明这些因素很重要,这些因素推动了包括非护理寻求、未能有效预防和自我管理以及家庭大量支出在内的混合就医之旅,以便在塞拉利昂等脆弱环境中改善 NCD 的预防和管理。