CRONICAS Centre of Excellence in Chronic Diseases, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
B. P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Dharan, Nepal.
Glob Health Action. 2021 Jan 1;14(1):1975920. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2021.1975920.
Four decades after the Alma-Ata Declaration, strengthening primary health care (PHC) remains a priority for health systems, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Given the prominence of chronic diseases as a global health issue, PHC must include a wide range of components in order to provide adequate care.
To assess PHC preparedness to provide chronic care in Mozambique, Nepal and Peru, we used, as 'tracer conditions', diabetes, hypertension and a country-specific neglected tropical disease with chronic sequelae in each country.
By implementing a health system assessment, we collected quantitative and qualitative data from primary and secondary sources, including interviews of key informants at three health-system levels (macro, meso and micro). The World Health Organization's health-system building blocks provided the basis for content analysis.
In total, we conducted 227 interviews. Our findings show that the ambitious policies targeting specific diseases lack the support of technical, administrative and financial resources. Data collection systems do not allow the monitoring of individual patients or provide the health system with the information it requires. Patients receive limited disease-specific information. Clinical guidelines and training are either non-existent or not adapted to local contexts. Availability of medicines and diagnostic tests at the PHC level is an issue. Although medicines available through the public health care system are affordable, some essential medicines suffer shortages or are not available to PHC providers. This need, along with a lack of clear referral procedures and available transportation, generates financial issues for individuals and affects access to health care.
PHC in these LMICs is not well prepared to provide adequate care for chronic diseases. Improving PHC to attain universal health coverage requires strengthening the identified weaknesses across health-system building blocks.
在《阿拉木图宣言》发表四十周年之际,加强初级卫生保健仍然是卫生系统的重点,尤其是在中低收入国家。鉴于慢性病已成为全球卫生问题,初级卫生保健必须纳入广泛的组成部分,以提供足够的护理。
为评估莫桑比克、尼泊尔和秘鲁的初级卫生保健提供慢性病护理的准备情况,我们选择了糖尿病、高血压和每个国家具有慢性后遗症的特定被忽视热带病作为“追踪条件”。
通过实施卫生系统评估,我们从初级和二级来源收集了定量和定性数据,包括对三个卫生系统层面(宏观、中观和微观)的关键信息提供者进行访谈。世界卫生组织的卫生系统组成部分为内容分析提供了依据。
共进行了 227 次访谈。研究结果表明,针对特定疾病的雄心勃勃的政策缺乏技术、行政和财政资源的支持。数据收集系统无法监测个别患者或为卫生系统提供所需的信息。患者只能获得有限的疾病特异性信息。临床指南和培训要么不存在,要么不适应当地情况。初级卫生保健层面的药品和诊断检测的供应是一个问题。尽管通过公共医疗保健系统提供的药品价格适中,但一些基本药物短缺或无法提供给初级卫生保健提供者。这种需求以及缺乏明确的转诊程序和可用的交通工具,给个人带来了经济问题,并影响了获得医疗保健的机会。
这些中低收入国家的初级卫生保健在提供慢性病护理方面准备不足。要改善初级卫生保健以实现全民健康覆盖,需要加强卫生系统组成部分中已确定的薄弱环节。