Department of Social Work, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Enugu 410001, Nigeria.
Health Policy Research Group, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, College of Medicine, University of Nigeria, Enugu-Campus, Enugu, Enugu 400241, Nigeria.
Int J Qual Health Care. 2024 Feb 27;36(1). doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzae015.
Primary healthcare facilities are the bedrock for achieving universal health coverage (UHC) because of their closeness to the grassroots and provision of healthcare at low cost. Unfortunately, in Nigeria, the access and quality of health services in public primary healthcare centres (PHCs) are suboptimal, linked with persistent occurrence of absenteeism of health workers. We used a UHC framework developed by the World Health Organization-African Region to examine the link between absenteeism and the possible achievement of UHC in Nigeria. We undertook a qualitative study to elicit lived experiences of healthcare providers, service users, chairpersons of committees of the health facilities, and policymakers across six PHCs from six local government areas in Enugu, southeast Nigeria. One hundred and fifty participants sourced from the four groups were either interviewed or participated in group discussions. The World Health Organization-African Region UHC framework and phenomenological approach were used to frame data analysis. Absenteeism was very prevalent in the PHCs, where it constrained the possible contribution of PHCs to the achievement of UHC. The four indicators toward achievement of UHC, which are demand, access, quality, and resilience of health services, were all grossly affected by absenteeism. Absenteeism also weakened public trust in PHCs, resulting in an increase in patronage of both informal and private health providers, with negative effects on quality and cost of care. It is important that great attention is paid to both availability and productivity of human resources for health at the PHC level. These factors would help in reversing the dangers of absenteeism in primary healthcare and strengthening Nigeria's aspirations of achieving UHC.
基层医疗卫生机构是实现全民健康覆盖(UHC)的基石,因为它们贴近基层,以低成本提供医疗服务。不幸的是,在尼日利亚,公共基层医疗保健中心(PHC)的卫生服务可及性和质量都不理想,与卫生工作者持续缺勤有关。我们使用世界卫生组织非洲区域制定的 UHC 框架来检查缺勤与尼日利亚可能实现 UHC 之间的联系。我们进行了一项定性研究,以了解来自尼日利亚东南部埃努古州六个地方政府区的六个 PHC 的医疗保健提供者、服务使用者、卫生设施委员会主席和政策制定者的生活经历。从这四个群体中选出的 150 名参与者接受了访谈或小组讨论。世界卫生组织非洲区域 UHC 框架和现象学方法用于框架数据分析。缺勤现象在 PHC 中非常普遍,限制了 PHC 对实现 UHC 的可能贡献。实现 UHC 的四个指标,即卫生服务的需求、可及性、质量和弹性,都受到缺勤的严重影响。缺勤也削弱了公众对 PHC 的信任,导致对非正式和私人卫生提供者的就诊增加,对护理质量和成本产生负面影响。在 PHC 层面上,非常重视卫生人力资源的可用性和生产力是很重要的。这些因素将有助于扭转基层医疗缺勤的危险,加强尼日利亚实现 UHC 的愿望。