Centre for Rural Health Research, Department of Family Practice, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Office of the Representative of Children and Youth of British Columbia (RCY BC), Victoria, BC, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Jan 4;23(1):8. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-09008-9.
The continued attrition of maternity services across rural communities in high resource countries demands a rigorous, systematic approach to determining population level need, including a clear understanding of feasibility issues that may constrain achieving and sustaining recommended levels of services. The Rural Birth Index (RBI) proposes a robust and objective methodology to determine such need along with attention to the feasibility of implementation.
Predictions of appropriate levels of maternity care in rural communities require consideration of the feasibility of implementation. Although previous work has focused on essential considerations that impact feasibility, there is little research documenting the barriers to implementation from the perspective of rural care providers and administrators.
We conducted in-depth, qualitative research interviews with rural community health care administrators and providers (n = 14) to understand the challenges of offering maternity care in 10 rural communities across British Columbia (BC).
Participants articulated three thematic challenges to providing maternity services in their communities: maintaining clinical skills and financial stability in the context of low procedural volume, recruitment and retention of care providers and challenges with patient transport.
Current models of compensation for maternity care are inadequate and inflexible and underscore many of the challenges to implementing a level of care that is based on population need. Re-thinking provision of care as a social obligation to actualize our system commitment to equity instead of working to achieve economies of scale is the first step to use equitable care. Addressing remuneration will provide the groundwork for solving other barriers to sustainable care.
在资源丰富的国家,农村社区的产科服务不断减少,这要求我们采取严格、系统的方法来确定人群层面的需求,包括清楚了解可能限制达到和维持推荐服务水平的可行性问题。农村分娩指数(RBI)提出了一种强大而客观的方法来确定这种需求,并关注实施的可行性。
预测农村社区适当的产科护理水平需要考虑实施的可行性。尽管之前的工作重点是影响可行性的基本考虑因素,但很少有研究从农村护理提供者和管理者的角度记录实施的障碍。
我们对不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)10 个农村社区的农村社区医疗保健管理人员和提供者(n=14)进行了深入的定性研究访谈,以了解在这些社区提供产妇护理的挑战。
参与者详细阐述了在社区提供产妇服务的三个主题挑战:在低程序量的情况下保持临床技能和财务稳定性,招聘和留住护理提供者,以及患者运输方面的挑战。
目前的产科护理补偿模式是不充分和不灵活的,突出了实施基于人群需求的护理水平的许多挑战。重新思考将护理作为实现我们系统对公平的承诺的社会责任,而不是努力实现规模经济,是实现公平护理的第一步。解决薪酬问题将为解决可持续护理的其他障碍奠定基础。