Human and financial resource needs for universal access to WHO-PEN interventions for diabetes and hypertension care in Eswatini: results from a time-and-motion and bottom-up costing study.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Harsh Vivek Harkare, Brianna Osetinsky, Ntombifuthi Ginindza, Bongekile Thobekile Cindzi, Nomfundo Mncina, Babatunde Akomolafe, Lisa-Rufaro Marowa, Nyasatu Ntshalintshali, Fabrizio Tediosi
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Abstract

Background: Eswatini faces persistent challenges in providing care for diabetes and hypertension, exacerbated by a shortage of healthcare workers. The implementation of WHO-PEN interventions aimed to address these issues, yet their effects on healthcare worker time requirements and associated costs remain unclear.

Methods: This study employed a time-and-motion analysis and a bottom-up cost assessment to quantify the human and financial resources required for scaling up WHO-PEN interventions nationally in Eswatini for all estimated diabetic and hypertensive patients.

Results: Findings reveal that healthcare workers in intervention-arm clinics reported longer workday durations compared to those in control-arm clinics, yet spent less time per patient while seeing more patients. The implementation of WHO-PEN interventions increased the workload on healthcare workers but also led to a notable increase in patient care utilization. Furthermore, a morning peak in patient visits was identified, suggesting potential opportunities for optimizing patient flow. Notably, scaling up care provision nationally with WHO-PEN interventions proved to be more cost saving than expanding standard-of-care treatment.

Conclusion: WHO-PEN interventions hold promise in improving access to diabetes and hypertension care in Eswatini while offering an efficient solution. However, addressing challenges in healthcare workforce creation and retention is crucial for sustained effectiveness. Policy makers must consider all aspects of the WHO-PEN intervention for informed decision-making. Trial registration US Clinical Trials Registry. NCT04183413. Trial registration date: December 3, 2019. https://ichgcp.net/clinical-trials-registry/NCT04183413.

在埃斯瓦提尼普及世界卫生组织--PEN 糖尿病和高血压护理干预措施的人力和财政资源需求:时间与运动和自下而上成本计算研究的结果。
背景:埃斯瓦提尼在提供糖尿病和高血压护理方面面临着长期挑战,而医护人员的短缺又加剧了这一挑战。WHO-PEN干预措施的实施旨在解决这些问题,但其对医护人员所需时间和相关成本的影响仍不清楚:这项研究采用了时间与运动分析法和自下而上的成本评估法,以量化在埃斯瓦提尼全国范围内推广 WHO-PEN 干预措施所需的人力和财政资源,用于所有估计的糖尿病和高血压患者:研究结果表明,与对照组诊所的医护人员相比,干预组诊所的医护人员报告的工作日时间更长,但每名患者花费的时间更少,同时接诊的患者更多。WHO-PEN干预措施的实施增加了医护人员的工作量,但也显著提高了患者护理利用率。此外,还发现了上午的就诊高峰,这表明有可能优化患者就诊流程。值得注意的是,事实证明,在全国范围内推广世界卫生组织-PEN干预措施比扩大标准护理治疗更能节约成本:结论:WHO-PEN干预措施有望改善埃斯瓦提尼糖尿病和高血压护理的可及性,同时提供了一种高效的解决方案。然而,解决医疗保健人员队伍的创建和保留方面的挑战对于持续有效至关重要。决策者必须考虑世界卫生组织-PEN干预措施的方方面面,以便做出明智的决策。试验注册美国临床试验注册中心。NCT04183413。试验注册日期:2019 年 12 月 3 日。https://ichgcp.net/clinical-trials-registry/NCT04183413。
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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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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