Centre d'Excellence d'Afrique pour La Prévention et le Contrôle des Maladies Transmissibles (CEA-PCMT), Université Gamal Abdel Nasser, Conakry, Guinea.
Evidence-Based Public Health Unit, Center for International Health Protection, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Oct 4;24(1):2710. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20181-w.
The level of trust in health systems is often in flux during public health emergencies and presents challenges in providing adequate health services and preventing the spread of disease. Experiences during previous epidemics has shown that lack of trust can impact the continuity of essential health services and response efforts. Guinea and Sierra Leone were greatly challenged by a lack of trust in the system during the Ebola epidemic. We thus sought to investigate what was perceived to influence public and community trust in the health system during the COVID-19 pandemic, and what strategies were employed by national level stakeholders in order to maintain or restore trust in the health system in Guinea and Sierra Leone.
This qualitative study was conducted through a document review and key informant interviews with actors involved in COVID-19 and/or in malaria control efforts in Guinea and Sierra Leone. Key informants were selected based on their role and level of engagement in the national level response. Thirty Six semi-structured interviews (16 in Guinea, 20 in Sierra Leone) were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using an inductive and deductive framework approach to thematic analysis.
Key informants described three overarching themes related to changes in trust and health seeking behavior due to COVID-19: (1) reignited fear and uncertainty among the population, (2) adaptations to sensitization and community engagement efforts, and (3) building on the legacy of Ebola as a continuous process. Communication, community engagement, and on-going support to health workers were reiterated as crucial factors for maintaining trust in the health system.
Lessons from the Ebola epidemic enabled response actors to consider maintaining and rebuilding trust as a core aim of the pandemic response which helped to ensure continuity of care and mitigate secondary impacts of the pandemic. Monitoring and maintaining trust in health systems is a key consideration for health systems resilience during public health emergencies.
在公共卫生突发事件期间,人们对卫生系统的信任水平往往会发生变化,这给提供充足的卫生服务和预防疾病传播带来了挑战。以往的疫情经验表明,缺乏信任会影响基本卫生服务的连续性和应对工作。在埃博拉疫情期间,几内亚和塞拉利昂因系统缺乏信任而面临巨大挑战。因此,我们试图调查在 COVID-19 大流行期间,是什么因素影响了公众和社区对卫生系统的信任,以及国家利益相关者采取了哪些策略来维持或恢复几内亚和塞拉利昂卫生系统的信任。
本定性研究通过对参与几内亚和塞拉利昂 COVID-19 和/或疟疾控制工作的文件进行审查和关键知情人访谈进行。根据他们在国家应对中的角色和参与程度选择关键知情人。在几内亚进行了 16 次半结构化访谈,在塞拉利昂进行了 20 次半结构化访谈,使用归纳和演绎框架方法对访谈进行分析。
关键知情人描述了三个与 COVID-19 导致的信任和寻求医疗服务行为变化相关的总体主题:(1)重新引起了民众的恐惧和不确定性;(2)调整了宣传和社区参与工作;(3)利用埃博拉的遗产作为一个持续的过程。沟通、社区参与和对卫生工作者的持续支持被反复强调是维持对卫生系统信任的关键因素。
埃博拉疫情的经验教训使应对行动者将维持和重建信任视为大流行应对的核心目标之一,这有助于确保护理的连续性,并减轻大流行的次生影响。监测和维持对卫生系统的信任是公共卫生紧急情况下卫生系统恢复力的关键考虑因素。