Department of Emergency Medicine, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, 55 Claverick Street Suite 101, Providence, RI, 02903, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Feb 15;24(1):212. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10673-1.
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is recognized as a key imaging modality to bridge the diagnostic imaging gap in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs). POCUS use has been shown to impact patient management decisions including referral for specialist care. This study explored the impact of POCUS use on referral decisions among trained healthcare providers working in primary rural and peri-urban health facilities in Kenya.
A concurrent mixed methods approach was used, including a locally developed survey (N = 38) and semi-structured interviews of POCUS trained healthcare providers (N = 12). Data from the survey was descriptively analyzed and interviews were evaluated through the framework matrix method.
Survey results of in-facility access to Xray, Ultrasonography, CT scan and MRI were 49%, 33%, 3% and 0% respectively. Only 54% of the facilities where trainees worked had the capacity to perform cesarean sections, and 38% could perform general surgery. Through a combined inductive and deductive evaluation of interview data, we found that the emerging themes could be organized through the framework of the six domains of healthcare quality as described by the Institute of Medicine: Providers reported that POCUS use allowed them to make referral decisions which were timely, safe, effective, efficient, equitable and patient-centered. Challenges included machine breakdown, poor image quality, practice isolation, lack of institutional support and insufficient feedback on the condition of patients after referral.
This study highlighted that in the setting of limited imaging and surgical capacity, POCUS use by trained providers in Kenyan primary health facilities has the potential to improve the patient referral process and to promote key dimensions of healthcare quality. Therefore, there is a need to expand POCUS training programs and to develop context specific POCUS referral algorithms.
床边超声(POCUS)被认为是弥合中低收入国家(LMICs)诊断成像差距的关键成像方式。POCUS 的使用已被证明会影响患者管理决策,包括转介给专科治疗。本研究探讨了在肯尼亚农村和城市周边初级卫生保健设施工作的经过培训的医疗保健提供者使用 POCUS 对转诊决策的影响。
采用了同时进行的混合方法,包括本地开发的调查(N=38)和接受过 POCUS 培训的医疗保健提供者的半结构化访谈(N=12)。对调查数据进行描述性分析,对访谈数据采用框架矩阵法进行评估。
调查结果显示,在机构内获取 X 光、超声、CT 扫描和 MRI 的机会分别为 49%、33%、3%和 0%。仅 54%的受训人员工作的设施有能力进行剖宫产,38%的设施可以进行普通外科手术。通过对访谈数据进行归纳和演绎的综合评估,我们发现出现的主题可以通过医学研究所描述的医疗保健质量的六个领域的框架来组织:提供者报告说,POCUS 的使用使他们能够做出及时、安全、有效、高效、公平和以患者为中心的转诊决策。挑战包括机器故障、图像质量差、实践孤立、缺乏机构支持以及转诊后对患者病情的反馈不足。
本研究强调,在成像和手术能力有限的情况下,肯尼亚初级卫生保健机构中经过培训的提供者使用 POCUS 有可能改善患者转诊流程,并促进医疗保健质量的关键方面。因此,需要扩大 POCUS 培训计划,并制定特定于情境的 POCUS 转诊算法。