Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
PharmAccess Foundation, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
J Glob Health. 2023 Jul 14;13:06024. doi: 10.7189/jogh.13.06024.
Epidemics can cause significant disruptions of essential health care services. This was evident in West-Africa during the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak, raising concerns that COVID-19 would have similar devastating consequences for the continent. Indeed, official facility-based records show a reduction in health care visits after the onset of COVID-19 in Kenya. Our question is whether this observed reduction was caused by lower access to health care or by reduced incidence of communicable diseases resulting from reduced mobility and social contacts.
We analysed monthly facility-based data from 2018 to 2020, and weekly health diaries data digitally collected by trained fieldworkers between February and November 2020 from 342 households, including 1974 individuals, in Kisumu and Kakamega Counties, Kenya. Diaries data was collected as part of an ongoing longitudinal study of a digital health insurance scheme (Kakamega), and universal health coverage implementation (Kisumu). We assessed the weekly incidence of self-reported medical symptoms, formal and informal health-seeking behaviour, and foregone care in the diaries and compared it with facility-based records. Linear probability regressions with household fixed-effects were performed to compare the weekly incidence of health outcomes before and after COVID-19.
Facility-based data showed a decrease in health care utilization for respiratory infections, enteric illnesses, and malaria, after start of COVID-19 measures in Kenya in March 2020. The weekly diaries confirmed this decrease in respiratory and enteric symptoms, and malaria / fever, mainly in the paediatric population. In terms of health care seeking behaviour, our diaries data find a temporary shift in consultations from health care centres to pharmacists / chemists / medicine vendors for a few weeks during the pandemic, but no increase in foregone care. According to the diaries, for adults the incidence of communicable diseases/symptoms rebounded after COVID-19 mobility restrictions were lifted, while for children the effects persisted.
COVID-19-related containment measures in Western Kenya were accompanied by a decline in respiratory infections, enteric illnesses, and malaria / fever mainly in children. Data from a population-based survey and facility-based records aligned regarding this finding despite the temporary shift to non-facility-based consultations and confirmed that the drop in utilization of health care services was not due to decreased accessibility, but rather to a lower incidence of these infections.
疫情可能会严重扰乱基本医疗服务。2014 年至 2016 年期间,西非的埃博拉疫情就充分证明了这一点,人们担心 COVID-19 会对非洲大陆造成类似的毁灭性后果。事实上,肯尼亚官方医疗机构的记录显示,自 COVID-19 爆发以来,医疗保健就诊次数有所减少。我们的问题是,这种观察到的减少是由于医疗保健可及性降低,还是由于流动性和社会接触减少导致传染病发病率降低所致。
我们分析了 2018 年至 2020 年的每月医疗机构数据,以及 2020 年 2 月至 11 月期间,在肯尼亚基苏木县和卡卡梅加县的 342 户家庭中,由经过培训的实地工作人员通过数字方式收集的每周健康日记数据,其中包括 1974 人。日记数据是正在进行的数字健康保险计划(卡卡梅加)和全民健康覆盖实施(基苏木)的一部分。我们评估了日记中自我报告的医疗症状、正规和非正规求医行为以及错过的治疗的每周发生率,并将其与医疗机构记录进行了比较。使用家庭固定效应线性概率回归比较了 COVID-19 开始前后每周健康结果的发生率。
肯尼亚于 2020 年 3 月开始采取 COVID-19 措施后,医疗机构数据显示呼吸道感染、肠道疾病和疟疾的医疗保健利用率下降。每周的日记也证实了呼吸道和肠道症状以及疟疾/发烧的减少,主要是在儿科人群中。在求医行为方面,我们的日记数据发现,在大流行期间,几周内从医疗保健中心向药剂师/化学家/药品供应商的咨询暂时转移,但没有错过的治疗增加。根据日记,COVID-19 流动性限制解除后,成年人传染病/症状的发病率反弹,而儿童的影响持续存在。
在肯尼亚西部,与 COVID-19 相关的遏制措施伴随着呼吸道感染、肠道疾病和疟疾/发烧的减少,主要是儿童。尽管出现了向非医疗机构咨询的临时转变,但基于人群的调查和医疗机构记录的数据在这方面是一致的,并证实了医疗服务利用率的下降不是由于可及性降低,而是由于这些感染的发病率降低。