患病儿童保健的卫生服务准备情况和质量:八个低收入和中等收入国家的有效覆盖面分析。

IF 4.5 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Abdoulaye Maïga, Gouda Roland M Mady, Elizabeth A Hazel, Safia S Jiwani, Emily B Wilson, Assanatou Bamogo, Helen W Kiarie, Agbessi Amouzou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:通过对肺炎、腹泻和疟疾等儿童疾病的及时和适当治疗,大多数儿童死亡是可以避免的。然而,研究表明,寻求护理的人数增加并不一定意味着得到了高质量的护理。我们评估了儿童时期治疗性卫生保健的服务准备情况和过程质量,并确定各国儿童是否获得了足够质量的卫生服务。方法:我们将孟加拉国、刚果民主共和国、海地、肯尼亚、马拉维、尼泊尔、塞内加尔和坦桑尼亚的家庭调查数据(包括标准人口与健康调查和多指标类集调查)与设施调查数据(包括服务提供评估和卫生设施评估)联系起来,以估计儿童疾病治疗的有效覆盖率。我们评估了在服务可获得性和覆盖范围、服务准备不足、错失护理机会和服务流程不足方面的差距,其中服务准备和流程质量是根据全球标准定义的,并针对具体国家进行了调整。我们分析了服务准备程度、护理质量以及个人疾病和综合疾病的有效覆盖范围。结果:7 - 42%的儿童至少经历过一种疾病。58-85%的设施提供儿童疾病综合管理服务。我们发现,这些国家55-66%的卫生机构已准备好为患病儿童提供治疗。然而,根据准备情况调整的联系表明,儿童保健主要是在准备情况得分较低的设施中寻求的,从15%(尼泊尔)到46.0%(马拉维)不等。卫生设施诊断、监督和训练有素的人员管理儿童疾病的能力较低。在护理质量方面,临床接触过程中只有51-60%的程序符合标准。护理人员的咨询得分最低,而治疗成分的过程质量得分最高。与初级设施和私营部门相比,医院的准备情况和流程质量得分更高。但是,所有国家在服务准备方面都存在很大差距,服务程序也严重不足;35%(海地)至79%(孟加拉国)的患病儿童到卫生机构寻求治疗,其中只有7%(尼泊尔)至29%(马拉维)的患病儿童实际得到适当治疗。我们发现,在求诊、医疗质量、不同教育水平、不同贫困程度和不同居住地点的有效覆盖方面存在很大的不平等。结论:很大比例的设施不满足提供儿童综合疾病管理服务所需的能力。保健服务的提供存在重大质量差距,突出表明需要加强保健服务的可及性、能力和护理质量,以实现儿童普遍健康覆盖。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health service readiness and quality for sick child care: an effective coverage analysis in eight low- and middle-income countries.

Background: Most child deaths can be averted through prompt and appropriate treatment of child illnesses such as pneumonia, diarrhoea, and malaria. However, research has suggested that increases in care seeking do not necessarily mean that quality care is being received. We assessed the service readiness and process quality of curative healthcare during childhood and determined whether children are receiving health services with sufficient quality across countries.

Methods: We linked data from household surveys including the standard Demographic and Health Survey and the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey to data from facility surveys including the Service Provision Assessment and Health Facility Assessment in Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, Senegal and Tanzania to estimate the effective coverage of child illness treatment. We assessed the gaps in service availability and coverage, lack of service readiness, missed care opportunities, and inadequate service process, where service readiness and process quality were defined according to global standards with country-specific adaptations. We analysed the service readiness, quality of care, and effective coverage by individual illness and combined illnesses accounting for equity dimensions.

Results: Seven to 42% of children experienced at least one illness. An integrated management of child illnesses (IMCI) service was available in 58-85% of facilities. We found that 55-66% of health facilities in the countries were ready to deliver treatment to sick children. However, the readiness-adjusted contact suggested that child healthcare was mostly sought in facilities with low readiness score, ranging from 15% (Nepal) to 46.0% (Malawi). Health facilities had low diagnostics, supervision, and trained personnel capacity to manage child illnesses. Concerning the quality of care, only 51-60% of the procedures during clinical encounters were in line with standards. Counselling of caretakers had the lowest score, while treatment components had the highest process quality score. Hospitals had higher readiness and process quality scores compared to primary facilities and the private sector. There were, however, large gaps in service readiness and significant inadequate service processes in all countries; 35% (Haiti) to 79% (Bangladesh) of sick children sought care from a health facility, with only 7% (Nepal) to 29% (Malawi) of them actually receiving appropriate treatment. We found large inequalities in care seeking, quality of care, and effective coverage across levels of education and poverty, and places of residence.

Conclusions: A large proportion of facilities did not meet the required capacity to provide IMCI services. The provision of health services has major quality gaps, highlighting the need for strengthening health service access, capacity and quality of care to reach universal child health coverage.

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来源期刊
Journal of Global Health
Journal of Global Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.80%
发文量
240
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Global Health is a peer-reviewed journal published by the Edinburgh University Global Health Society, a not-for-profit organization registered in the UK. We publish editorials, news, viewpoints, original research and review articles in two issues per year.
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