Department of Health, Behavior, and Society, Faculty of Public Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Oromia, Ethiopia.
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Health Sciences, Jimma University, Jimma, Oromia, Ethiopia.
PLoS One. 2021 Aug 12;16(8):e0255390. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0255390. eCollection 2021.
Successful health care and clinical services essentially depend on patients' realization of ones' rights, and health workers' and facilities' fulfillments and protections of these rights. However, little is documented about how patients and health workers perceive patients' rights during care-seeking practices.
A qualitative study was conducted in four hospitals in Ethiopia through 8 focus group discussions with patients and 14 individual interviews with diverse groups of patients, caretakers, and 14 interviews with health workers. Participants were recruited through a purposive sampling method to meet the saturation of ideas about patients' rights. The sampled patients, caretakers, and professionals were enlisted from various departments in the hospitals. The data analysis was assisted by ATLAS.ti 7.1.4.
The study identified three major categories of healthcare rights (clinical, socio-cultural, and organizational), incorporating supporting elements of education, engagement, and empowerment. Study participants reported detailed rights the patients would have during hospital visits which included the right to timely access to care and treatment, adequate medications) with full respect, dignity, and without any discrimination. Patients widely perceived that they had the right to tell their illness history and know their illness in the language they can understand. It was also widely agreed that patients have the right to be educated and guided to make informed choices of services, procedures, and medications. Additionally, patients reported that they had the right to be accompanied by caretakers together with the right to use facilities and resources and get instructions on how to utilize these resources, the right to be protected from exposure to infections and unsafe conditions in hospitals, right to get a diet of their preference, and right to referral for further care. Nevertheless, there was a common concern among patients and caretakers that these rights were mostly non-existent in practice which were due to barriers related to patients (fear of consequence; a sense of dependency, feeling of powerlessness, perceptions of low medical literacy), health workers (negligence, lack of awareness and recognition of patient rights, undermining patients), and facilities' readiness and support, including lack of guiding framework.
Perceived patients' rights in the context of hospital visits were profoundly numerous, ranging from the right to access clinical and non-clinical services that are humanely respectful, fulfilling socio-cultural contexts, and in a manner that is organizationally coordinated. Nonetheless, the rights were not largely realized and fulfilled. Engaging, educating, and empowering patients, caretakers, and health care providers supported with policy framework could help to move towards patient-centered and right-based healthcare whereby patients' rights are protected and fulfilled in such resource-limited settings.
成功的医疗保健和临床服务实质上取决于患者对自身权利的认知,以及卫生工作者对这些权利的履行和保护。然而,在寻求医疗服务的过程中,患者和卫生工作者如何看待患者权利的相关研究却寥寥无几。
本研究在埃塞俄比亚的四家医院开展了一项定性研究,共进行了 8 次患者焦点小组讨论和 14 次不同群体患者、照顾者的个体访谈,以及 14 次与卫生工作者的访谈。采用目的性抽样方法招募参与者,以充分了解有关患者权利的各种观点。抽样患者、照顾者和专业人员来自医院的各个科室。使用 ATLAS.ti 7.1.4 软件对数据进行分析。
研究确定了三大类医疗保健权利(临床、社会文化和组织),其中包含教育、参与和赋权的支持性元素。研究参与者详细报告了患者在医院就诊期间享有的权利,包括及时获得医疗服务和治疗、获得充分尊重、尊严和不受歧视的权利。患者普遍认为,他们有权讲述自己的病史并以自己能够理解的语言了解自己的病情。人们还普遍认为,患者有权接受教育和指导,以便对服务、程序和药物做出明智的选择。此外,患者还报告称,他们有权在照顾者的陪同下接受治疗,有权使用设施和资源,并获得有关如何使用这些资源的指导,有权免受医院感染和不安全条件的暴露,有权获得自己喜欢的饮食,以及有权转至其他医疗机构接受进一步治疗。然而,患者和照顾者普遍担心这些权利在实践中大多无法实现,这是由于与患者(对后果的恐惧;依赖感、无力感、低医疗素养认知)、卫生工作者(疏忽、缺乏对患者权利的认识和认可、破坏患者权利)和设施准备情况和支持情况相关的障碍所致。
在医院就诊背景下,患者感知到的权利众多,范围从获得人性化的尊重、满足社会文化背景、组织协调的临床和非临床服务的权利。然而,这些权利并未得到广泛实现和履行。通过让患者、照顾者和卫生保健提供者参与进来,对他们进行教育和赋权,并提供政策框架支持,有助于实现以患者为中心和以权利为基础的医疗保健,从而在资源有限的环境中保护和履行患者权利。