Telephone hotlines for infectious disease outbreaks in Africa: A review and qualitative study

IF 0.6 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Noah Fongwen, Almighty Nchafack, Kyeng M. Tetuh, J. J. Ong, Joseph D. Tucker, Gwenda Hughes, Rosanna Peeling
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Mobile health interventions like telephone hotlines face challenges that may threaten their use, adoption and sustainability in Africa.Aim: We sought to understand the barriers and facilitators for sustainability of telephone hotlines used in infectious disease outbreaks in Africa using a scoping review and a qualitative study.Setting: Participants form 12 African countries and Database searches.Methods: Databases were searched for articles on the barriers and/or facilitators in operating telephone hotlines for outbreaks in Africa. One-on-one interviews and focus group discussions with 30 participants from 12 African countries were also conducted. Emerging themes from the review and interviews were identified and synthesised to focus on barriers and facilitators for the sustainability of the hotlines.Results: The search identified 1153 citations, and 25 studies were finally included. The articles were from 20 African countries. The government was the main source of funding in four countries. Barriers with calls and data management were the most frequent. Human resource barriers such as limited staff, high staff turnover, a lack of incentives and motivation were also significant. Financial barriers were the high cost of operation and huge dependence on external funders. Technological and infrastructural hurdles included limited Internet and phone coverage, malfunction and a lack of interoperability of software. Transitioning to either complete or shared government ownership with diversification and integration of the hotline into routine use was the main facilitator for sustainability.Conclusion: Strengthening technical capacity in telephone hotlines and ensuring financial sustainability are critical. Increased government support is needed.Contribution: More studies on costing will help in developing financial sustainability models for Africa.
非洲传染病疫情电话热线:回顾与定性研究
背景:电话热线等移动医疗干预措施在非洲的使用、采纳和可持续性可能面临挑战。目的:我们试图通过范围综述和定性研究,了解在非洲爆发传染病时使用电话热线的障碍和促进其可持续性的因素:环境: 12 个非洲国家的参与者和数据库搜索:在数据库中搜索有关非洲疫情电话热线运行障碍和/或促进因素的文章。此外,还对来自 12 个非洲国家的 30 名参与者进行了一对一访谈和焦点小组讨论。从综述和访谈中确定了新出现的主题,并对其进行了综合,重点关注热线可持续发展的障碍和促进因素:结果:搜索发现了 1153 条引文,最终纳入了 25 项研究。这些文章来自 20 个非洲国家。政府是四个国家的主要资金来源。最常见的障碍是通话和数据管理。人力资源方面的障碍也很重要,如人员有限、人员更替率高、缺乏激励和动力。财务障碍是运营成本高,对外部资助者的依赖性大。技术和基础设施方面的障碍包括互联网和电话覆盖面有限、软件故障和缺乏互操作性。向政府完全或共同拥有过渡,使热线多样化并纳入日常使用,是可持续发展的主要促进因素:结论:加强电话热线的技术能力和确保财务可持续性至关重要。需要政府加大支持力度:贡献:更多关于成本核算的研究将有助于为非洲开发财务可持续性模型。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Health in Africa
Journal of Public Health in Africa PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
82
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Public Health in Africa (JPHiA) is a peer-reviewed, academic journal that focuses on health issues in the African continent. The journal editors seek high quality original articles on public health related issues, reviews, comments and more. The aim of the journal is to move public health discourse from the background to the forefront. The success of Africa’s struggle against disease depends on public health approaches.
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