Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
World J Surg. 2022 Nov;46(11):2607-2615. doi: 10.1007/s00268-022-06686-8. Epub 2022 Aug 22.
Ghana has a large and growing burden of injury morbidity and mortality. There is a substantial unmet need for trauma surgery, highlighting a need to understand gaps in care.
We conducted 8 in-depth interviews with trauma care providers (surgeons, nurses, and specialists) at a large teaching hospital to understand factors that contribute to and reduce delays in the provision of adequate trauma care for severely injured patients. The study aimed to understand whether providers thought factors differed between patients that were enrolled in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and those that were not. Findings were presented for the third delay (provision of appropriate care) in the Three Delays Framework.
Key findings included that most factors contributing delays in the provision of adequate care were related to the costs of care, including for diagnostics, medications, and treatment for patients with and without NHIS subscription. Other notable factors included conflicts between providers, resource constraints, and poor coordination of care at the facility. Factors which reduce delays included advocacy by providers and informal processes for prioritizing critical injuries.
We recommend facility-level changes including increasing equity in access to trauma and elective surgery through targeted system strengthening efforts (e.g., a scheduled back-up call system for surgeons, anesthetists, other specialists, and nurses; designated operating theatres and staff for emergencies; training of staff), policy changes to simplify the insurance renewal and subscription processes, and future research on the costs and benefits of including diagnostics, medications, and common trauma services into the NHIS benefits package.
加纳的伤害发病率和死亡率负担巨大且不断增加。创伤外科的需求未得到充分满足,这突显了需要了解护理方面的差距。
我们对一家大型教学医院的创伤护理提供者(外科医生、护士和专家)进行了 8 次深入访谈,以了解导致严重受伤患者适当创伤护理延迟的因素,并探讨这些因素是否因患者是否参加国家健康保险计划(NHIS)而有所不同。本研究旨在了解提供者是否认为在第三个延迟(提供适当的护理)方面,NHIS 订阅者和非订阅者之间存在差异。研究结果是根据“三延迟框架”中的第三个延迟呈现的。
主要发现包括,导致适当护理提供延迟的大多数因素都与医疗费用有关,包括 NHIS 订阅者和非订阅者的诊断、药物和治疗费用。其他值得注意的因素包括提供者之间的冲突、资源限制以及设施内护理协调不善。减少延迟的因素包括提供者的倡导以及为关键创伤患者提供非正式的优先处理程序。
我们建议在设施层面进行变革,包括通过有针对性的系统强化努力(例如,为外科医生、麻醉师、其他专家和护士制定备用电话系统;为紧急情况指定手术室和工作人员;培训工作人员),来增加创伤和择期手术的公平获取机会,政策改革以简化保险续期和订阅流程,并对将诊断、药物和常见创伤服务纳入 NHIS 福利套餐的成本和效益进行未来研究。