Strengthened primary health care for universal health coverage through improved community diagnosis and management of pneumonia in Zimbabwe

Manangazira Portia, Rusike Itai, Mathias Mandy, Moyo Tjedu, Chibaya Moreblessing, Rusike Joshua Panashe
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Abstract

Pneumonia is the world’s leading infectious killer, claiming the lives of an estimated 2.5 million including more than 670,000 children under five years and 1.2 million adults in 2019 alone. Caused largely by viruses, and bacteria, COVID-19 also increased the pneumonia burden, while environmental factors, poor hygiene, sanitation and underlying conditions including malnutrition predispose. The latter translates into a considerable pneumonia burden that is preventable, provided the requisite provisions are made for community-level protection such as environmental management, water, sanitation and hygiene; and key persons are informed and educated on preventive and therapeutic measures, especially what to look for and what to do at home while seeking medical attention. Irked by the high numbers of under-five deaths against a background of limited case management caused by the system-wide collapse of the health services in the country, we sought to utilize the opportunity offered by world pneumonia day 2022 to go down to the community and elicit both the disease burden and strategies to address pneumonia that can be applied within the home and community. We also wanted to hear from the community their experiences with and functionality of the referral system. This paper presents the findings, challenges and suggestions for improving primary healthcare implementation to address the current high morbidity and mortality attributable to pneumonia. We found the Goromonzi community to be literate in many health issues but need more information and training to better manage pneumonia. They were knowledgeable about pneumonia, tuberculosis, and the recent COVID-19 through their interactions with the local clinic staff, the media, and interpersonal communication. Some were members of the health center committee or were village health workers or local leaders. We had limitations of resources and time for a detailed study, but conclude that the community visited had a sound understanding of health, primary health care and pneumonia, but lacked the comprehensive education and support to effectively manage pneumonia at home. More work needs to be done to quantify the pneumonia burden, the contribution of each intervention, (environment, vaccination, exclusive breastfeeding, safe water, sanitation, hand hygiene, reduced smoke and case management) the benefit of home and community management alongside an effective referral chain.
通过改善津巴布韦的社区肺炎诊断和管理,加强初级卫生保健,实现全民健康覆盖
肺炎是世界上主要的传染性杀手,仅在2019年就夺去了约250万人的生命,其中包括67万多名五岁以下儿童和120万成年人。COVID-19主要由病毒和细菌引起,也增加了肺炎负担,而环境因素、卫生条件差、环境卫生和包括营养不良在内的潜在条件也易导致肺炎。后者转化为可预防的相当大的肺炎负担,只要为社区一级的保护提供必要的规定,如环境管理、水、环境卫生和个人卫生;对关键人物进行预防和治疗措施方面的宣传和教育,特别是在寻求医疗照顾时在家里要注意什么和做什么。由于该国卫生服务系统崩溃,在病例管理有限的背景下,5岁以下儿童死亡人数众多,这让我们感到烦恼,我们试图利用2022年世界肺炎日提供的机会,深入社区,了解疾病负担和可在家庭和社区内应用的应对肺炎的战略。我们也想从社区听到他们的经验和功能的转介系统。本文提出了研究结果、挑战和建议,以改善初级卫生保健的实施,以解决目前肺炎引起的高发病率和死亡率。我们发现戈罗蒙兹社区在许多健康问题上都是有文化的,但需要更多的信息和培训来更好地管理肺炎。他们通过与当地诊所工作人员、媒体和人际交往的互动,了解肺炎、结核病和最近的COVID-19。有些人是卫生中心委员会的成员,或者是村卫生工作者或当地领导人。由于资源和时间的限制,我们无法进行详细的研究,但得出的结论是,所访问的社区对健康、初级卫生保健和肺炎有良好的了解,但缺乏全面的教育和支持,无法在家中有效地管理肺炎。需要做更多的工作来量化肺炎负担、每项干预措施(环境、疫苗接种、纯母乳喂养、安全饮用水、环境卫生、手部卫生、减少吸烟和病例管理)的贡献、家庭和社区管理以及有效转诊链的益处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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