School of Health and Related Research- ScHARR, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Mar 5;24(1):282. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10701-0.
Infertility is a major health issue worldwide, yet very few examples of interventions addressing infertility in the Global South have been documented to date. In The Gambia, West Africa, infertility is recognised as a burden and the health authorities have included it in several health policies and the new National Reproductive Health Strategy however, a detailed operationalisation plan for fertility care has not yet been established. Here, we aim to understand and document the factors that influence the implementation of fertility care in The Gambia.
We conducted 46 semi-structured interviews with policymakers, implementers, and health practitioners in both the public and private sectors from July to November 2021. The interviews were transcribed, anonymised and analysed with NVivo Pro version 1.6.1. The analysis was initially inductive, with themes arising from the coding categorised according to the WHO health systems building blocks framework.
This study identified several barriers to a successful implementation of fertility care in The Gambia, including (i) a lack of routinely collected infertility data; (ii) an absence of financial protection mechanisms for patients, and/or a specific budget for infertility; (iii) limited cooperation between the public and private sectors in the provision of fertility care; and (iv) gaps in fertility care training among health practitioners. Conversely, enablers included: (i) strong national infertility leadership; and (ii) the integration of infertility care within public reproductive health services.
The Gambian health system is not yet in the position to support a comprehensive fertility care package in its public health facilities. Several aspects of the implementation of fertility care must be considered in operationalising the health strategy including the systematic collection of infertility data, fertility awareness, and the provision of specialised fertility care training. Furthermore, a stronger partnership between the public and private sectors must be developed. Given the increasing availability of assisted reproductive technologies in the sub-Saharan Africa region, and the tendency to locate these technologies in the private sector, further research is needed to understand and identify the processes underlying the implementation of fertility care and to foster better integration with the existing health system.
不孕不育是全球范围内的一个主要健康问题,但迄今为止,很少有针对非洲南部地区不孕不育干预措施的实例被记录下来。在冈比亚,西非,不孕不育被认为是一种负担,卫生当局已将其纳入多项卫生政策和新的国家生殖健康战略中,但尚未制定详细的生育护理运作计划。在这里,我们旨在了解和记录影响冈比亚生育护理实施的因素。
我们于 2021 年 7 月至 11 月期间与公共和私营部门的政策制定者、实施者和卫生从业者进行了 46 次半结构化访谈。访谈记录被转录、匿名化,并使用 NVivo Pro 版本 1.6.1 进行分析。分析最初是归纳性的,根据世卫组织卫生系统构建模块框架,对编码分类的主题进行分类。
本研究确定了冈比亚成功实施生育护理的几个障碍,包括:(一)缺乏常规收集的不孕不育数据;(二)患者缺乏财务保护机制,或者没有专门的不孕不育预算;(三)公共和私营部门在提供生育护理方面合作有限;(四)卫生从业者在生育护理培训方面存在差距。相反,有利因素包括:(一)冈比亚国家不孕不育领导力较强;(二)将不孕不育护理纳入公共生殖健康服务。
冈比亚的卫生系统尚未准备好在其公共卫生设施中提供全面的生育护理套餐。在实施卫生战略时,必须考虑生育护理实施的几个方面,包括系统地收集不孕不育数据、提高对不孕不育的认识,以及提供专门的生育护理培训。此外,必须发展公共和私营部门之间更强大的伙伴关系。鉴于撒哈拉以南非洲地区辅助生殖技术的日益普及,以及这些技术倾向于定位在私营部门,需要进一步研究以了解和确定生育护理实施背后的过程,并促进与现有卫生系统更好地整合。