Invisible and undervalued: A qualitative study of laboratory workers' experiences and perceptions of laboratory strengthening in Sierra Leone.

IF 1 Q4 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine Pub Date : 2024-05-31 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.4102/ajlm.v13i1.2292
Mohamed B Jalloh, Eva Vernooij, Alice Street
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The 2013-2016 West Africa Ebola outbreak highlighted the importance of laboratory capacity to outbreak response while also revealing its long-standing neglect. The outbreak prompted massive international investment into strengthening laboratory services across multiple healthcare settings.

Objective: In this article, we explore hospital-based clinical laboratory workers' experiences and perceptions of their everyday working environment in Sierra Leone, and how recent investments in laboratory strengthening have shaped these.

Methods: This qualitative study draws on in-depth interviews with eight laboratory workers and participant observation of laboratory practices at a tertiary referral hospital in Freetown between April 2019 and December 2019. Interview and observational data were coded and analysed using a reflexive thematic approach.

Results: The Ebola outbreak prompted international investments in automated devices, biosafety training, and a new dedicated infectious diseases laboratory. However, little investment was made in the infrastructure and supply systems needed to sustain routine laboratory work or keep machines functioning. Laboratory workers perceived their work to be under-recognised and undervalued by the government, hospital managers and clinical staff, a perception compounded by under-use of the hospital's laboratory services by clinicians.

Conclusion: Understanding laboratory technicians' views, experiences, and priorities is essential to any sustainable laboratory-strengthening effort. Investments in personnel should match investments in technologies and infrastructure for outbreak response.

What this study adds: This study contributes to an understanding of how clinical laboratory personnel in Sierra Leone view and experience their work, and introduces the concept of social invisibility to explain these experiences.

无形和低估:塞拉利昂实验室工作人员对加强实验室工作的经验和看法的定性研究。
背景:2013-2016 年西非埃博拉疫情的爆发凸显了实验室能力对疫情应对的重要性,同时也暴露了实验室能力长期以来被忽视的问题。疫情爆发促使国际社会投入巨资,加强多种医疗机构的实验室服务:在这篇文章中,我们探讨了塞拉利昂医院临床实验室工作人员对其日常工作环境的体验和看法,以及近期对加强实验室服务的投资如何影响了这些体验和看法:这项定性研究利用了 2019 年 4 月至 2019 年 12 月期间对弗里敦一家三级转诊医院的 8 名实验室工作人员进行的深入访谈和对实验室实践的参与观察。采用反思性主题方法对访谈和观察数据进行编码和分析:埃博拉疫情爆发促使国际社会对自动化设备、生物安全培训和新的传染病专用实验室进行投资。然而,在维持常规实验室工作或保持机器正常运转所需的基础设施和供应系统方面却几乎没有投资。实验室工作人员认为他们的工作没有得到政府、医院管理人员和临床医护人员的充分认可和重视,而临床医生对医院实验室服务的使用不足又加剧了这种看法:结论:了解实验室技术人员的观点、经验和优先事项对于任何可持续的实验室强化工作都至关重要。对人员的投资应与对疫情应对技术和基础设施的投资相匹配:本研究有助于了解塞拉利昂临床实验室人员如何看待和体验他们的工作,并引入了社会隐匿性的概念来解释这些体验。
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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来源期刊
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine
African Journal of Laboratory Medicine MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
53
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The African Journal of Laboratory Medicine, the official journal of ASLM, focuses on the role of the laboratory and its professionals in the clinical and public healthcare sectors,and is specifically based on an African frame of reference. Emphasis is on all aspects that promote and contribute to the laboratory medicine practices of Africa. This includes, amongst others: laboratories, biomedical scientists and clinicians, medical community, public health officials and policy makers, laboratory systems and policies (translation of laboratory knowledge, practices and technologies in clinical care), interfaces of laboratory with medical science, laboratory-based epidemiology, laboratory investigations, evidence-based effectiveness in real world (actual) settings.
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