International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH), Department of Global Health, University of Washington, 325 Ninth Ave, Box # 359932, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA.
Faculté de Médecine et de Pharmacie, Université d'Etat d'Haïti (National University of Haiti), 89, Rue Oswald DURAND, Port-Au-Prince, HT6110, Haïti.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Jan 23;23(1):66. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-09041-2.
Poor quality of care is a barrier to engagement in HIV care and treatment in low- and middle-income country settings. This study involved focus group discussions (FGD) with patients and health workers in two large urban hospitals to describe quality of patient education and psychosocial support services within Haiti's national HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) program. The purpose of this qualitative study was to illuminate key gaps and salient "ingredients" for improving quality of care.
The study included 8 FGDs with a total of 26 male patients and 32 female patients and 15 smaller FGDs with 57 health workers. The analysis used a directed content analysis method, with the goal of extending existing conceptual frameworks on quality of care through rich description.
Dimension of safety, patient-centeredness, accessibility, and equity were most salient. Patients noted risks to privacy with both clinic and community-based services as well as concerns with ART side effects, while health workers described risks to their own safety in providing community-based services. While patients cited examples of positive interactions with health workers that centered their needs and perspectives, they also noted concerns that inhibited trust and satisfaction with services. Health workers described difficult working conditions that challenged their ability to provide patient-centered services. Patients sought favored relationships with health workers to help them navigate the health care system, but this undermined the sense of fairness. Both patients and health workers described frustration with lack of resources to assist patients in dire poverty, and health workers described great pressure to help patients from their "own pockets."
These concerns reflected the embeddedness of patient - provider interactions within a health system marked by scarcity, power dynamics between patients and health workers, and social stigma related to HIV. Reinforcing a respectful and welcoming atmosphere, timely service, privacy protection, and building patient perception of fairness in access to support could help to build patient satisfaction and care engagement in Haiti. Improving working conditions for health workers is also critical to achieving quality.
在中低收入国家,护理质量差是参与艾滋病毒护理和治疗的障碍。本研究通过在两家大型城市医院进行焦点小组讨论(FGD),描述了海地国家艾滋病毒抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)方案中患者教育和心理社会支持服务的质量。这项定性研究的目的是阐明改善护理质量的关键差距和突出的“要素”。
该研究包括 8 次男性患者和 32 次女性患者共 26 人的 FGD,以及 15 次 57 名卫生工作者参加的较小 FGD。分析采用定向内容分析法,目的是通过丰富的描述扩展现有的护理质量概念框架。
安全、以患者为中心、可及性和公平性是最突出的维度。患者提到诊所和社区服务都存在隐私风险,以及对 ART 副作用的担忧,而卫生工作者则描述了在提供社区服务时自身安全面临的风险。尽管患者举例说明了与卫生工作者的积极互动,这些互动以他们的需求和观点为中心,但他们也提到了一些阻碍他们对服务信任和满意度的问题。卫生工作者描述了困难的工作条件,这挑战了他们提供以患者为中心服务的能力。患者寻求与卫生工作者建立有利的关系,以帮助他们在贫困中导航,但这破坏了公平感。患者和卫生工作者都对缺乏资源帮助贫困患者感到沮丧,卫生工作者描述了在自己的“口袋里”帮助患者的巨大压力。
这些担忧反映了患者与提供者之间的互动嵌入在一个以稀缺为特征的卫生系统中,该系统中存在患者与卫生工作者之间的权力动态以及与 HIV 相关的社会污名。加强尊重和欢迎的氛围、及时的服务、隐私保护以及建立患者对获得支持的公平性的看法,可以帮助提高患者的满意度和参与度。改善卫生工作者的工作条件对于实现高质量护理也至关重要。