Division of Social and Behavioural Sciences, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Centre for Evidence-based Health Care, Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Department of Global Health, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Jan 29;22(1):128. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07540-2.
Many people diagnosed with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) in tertiary and district hospitals in South Africa do not arrive at their primary care clinic for continued care after they are discharged from the hospital. This loss to follow up is a major, ongoing problem for public health in South Africa, and contributes to drug-resistant TB strains. The objective of this paper was to explore patients' experiences and perceptions of diagnosis and treatment before their discharge from hospital. We use a framework known as patient-centred care to illustrate how these patient narratives point to lapses in these principles within the hospital system, and to show how such lapses may contribute to loss to follow up and inconsistent TB care.
We employed a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews to investigate patient and healthcare workers' experiences and perceptions of TB care in two Western Cape hospitals. We purposefully sampled 17 patients, 10 healthcare workers, and two key informant policy makers, all of whom had relevant experiences and insights. Data collection was done between October 2015 and February 2017. Data were analysed using Miles and Huberman's qualitative analysis framework.
Hospitals did not achieve patient-centred care. Newly diagnosed patients were provided with inadequate TB education, diseased-focused approaches were favoured over patient-focused approaches, and there was limited engagement with patients to understand their needs and feelings during the critical period between diagnosis and discharge. Consequently, some patients felt anxious prior to their discharge from hospital. Coupled with their overwhelming socio-economic barriers and complex family situations, some patients felt hopeless and powerless as they prepared for discharge. Finally, there was a lack of patient-provider partnership due to problems including healthcare workers' time constraints and heavy workloads, which detracted from a focus on patients' needs and feelings.
Improving the three intersecting elements of patient-centred care (health education, engaging with patients' needs and feelings, and shared decision-making) has the potential to positively influence patients' continuity of care for TB in South Africa. It would be helpful to also proactively address how patients plan to stay connected to care, on treatment, and supported, in light of their family situation or socio-economic circumstances. Detailed and unique pre-discharge counselling for each patient may be valuable in this regard.
在南非的三级和地区医院被诊断患有结核分枝杆菌(TB)的许多人在出院后并未前往初级保健诊所接受后续护理。这种随访的流失是南非公共卫生的一个主要且持续存在的问题,导致了耐药结核菌株的出现。本文的目的是探讨患者在出院前对诊断和治疗的体验和看法。我们使用以患者为中心的护理框架来说明这些患者的叙述如何指向医院系统中这些原则的失误,并展示这些失误如何导致随访流失和不一致的结核病护理。
我们采用了一项定性研究,使用半结构化访谈来调查西开普省两家医院的患者和医护人员对结核病护理的体验和看法。我们有目的地对 17 名患者、10 名医护人员和 2 名关键信息政策制定者进行了抽样,他们都有相关的经验和见解。数据收集于 2015 年 10 月至 2017 年 2 月进行。使用迈尔斯和休伯曼的定性分析框架对数据进行分析。
医院没有实现以患者为中心的护理。新诊断的患者接受的结核病教育不足,倾向于以疾病为中心的方法而不是以患者为中心的方法,并且在诊断和出院之间的关键时期,与患者的互动有限,无法了解他们的需求和感受。因此,一些患者在出院前感到焦虑。加上他们沉重的社会经济障碍和复杂的家庭情况,一些患者在为出院做准备时感到绝望和无助。最后,由于医护人员的时间限制和工作量大等问题,缺乏医患合作关系,这削弱了对患者需求和感受的关注。
改善以患者为中心的护理的三个相互关联的要素(健康教育、满足患者的需求和感受、以及共同决策)有可能对南非结核病患者的护理连续性产生积极影响。积极解决患者在家庭情况或社会经济环境下如何计划保持与治疗的联系以及得到支持的问题也将有所帮助。针对每个患者进行详细和独特的出院前咨询可能对此有所帮助。