Benard Okechi, Charles T Orjiakor, Chukwudi Nwokolo, Chukwuedozie Ajaero, Mahua Das, Obinna Onwujekwe
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Poor living conditions and poverty in urban slums mean that informal health providers (IHPs) often dominate health service provision in such settings. We explored the capacity of leaders within slums to contribute to linking IHPs to formal health providers (FHPs), for improved access to quality health services in slums.
Method: We purposively selected and interviewed 16 community leaders across 8 urban slums in Enugu and Anambra states in Southeast Nigeria. Transcribed interviews were then analyzed using thematic analysis aided by NVIVO.
Finding: Chairpersons and local vigilante security outfits were ubiquitous across urban slum communities- coordinating and influencing actors and health activities within settlements. Oversight functions and lived experiences meant leaders had a good insight into existing community dynamics. Slum leaders acknowledged the differential roles, as well as the strengths and weaknesses of FHPs and IHPs. Linkage establishment was considered potentially useful, and leaders were willing to assist, if the existing shortcomings in FHPs were addressed.
Conclusion: Despite being under-recognized, leaders in urban slums have the potential to help the realization of health goals given their grassroots influences. Leaders in urban have strategic positional knowledge and leverage that could catalyze the IHP-FHP linkage conversation and implementation towards improving access to quality healthcare services in slums.
期刊介绍:
Discover Social Science and Health is an interdisciplinary, international journal that publishes papers at the intersection of the social and biomedical sciences. Papers should integrate, in both theory and measures, a social perspective (reflecting anthropology, criminology, economics, epidemiology, policy, sociology, etc) and a concern for health (mental and physical). Health, broadly construed, includes biological and other indicators of overall health, symptoms, diseases, diagnoses, treatments, treatment adherence, and related concerns. Drawing on diverse, sound methodologies, submissions may include reports of new empirical findings (including important null findings) and replications, reviews and perspectives that construe prior research and discuss future research agendas, methodological research (including the evaluation of measures, samples, and modeling strategies), and short or long commentaries on topics of wide interest. All submissions should include statements of significance with respect to health and future research. Discover Social Science and Health is an Open Access journal that supports the pre-registration of studies.
Topics
Papers suitable for Discover Social Science and Health will include both social and biomedical theory and data. Illustrative examples of themes include race/ethnicity, sex/gender, socioeconomic, geographic, and other social disparities in health; migration and health; spatial distribution of risk factors and access to healthcare; health and social relationships; interactional processes in healthcare, treatments, and outcomes; life course patterns of health and treatment regimens; cross-national patterns in health and health policies; characteristics of communities and neighborhoods and health; social networks and treatment adherence; stigma and disease progression; methodological studies including psychometric properties of measures frequently used in health research; and commentary and analysis of key concepts, theories, and methods in studies of social science and biomedicine. The journal welcomes submissions that draw on biomarkers of health, genetically-informed and neuroimaging data, psychophysiological measures, and other forms of data that describe physical and mental health, access to health care, treatment, and related constructs.