评估在尼泊尔农村低收入地区实施“农村综合卫生项目”卫生系统对健康的影响。

PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-04-29 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004458
Fred Barker, Radhakat Jha, Jasmine Morrish, Arbind Sah, Ramesh Choudhary, Richard W Walker, Mike Lavender
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引用次数: 0

摘要

建立和建设以社区为基础的基层卫生保健系统是可持续改善世界低收入地区卫生保健可及性的关键途径。一个突出的早期例子是农村综合卫生项目(CRHP),它启发了随后全球大规模项目的框架。然而,许多社区卫生项目所提供的服务范围不及社区卫生方案,这可能会对健康结果产生影响。这项定性研究的重点是尼泊尔农村的12个达利特村,该研究是在一项名为“村庄活着项目”(Village Alive Project, VAP)的干预之后进行的,该干预旨在通过crhp式的卫生系统促进医疗保健的提供。通过42次半结构化访谈,评估了村民和卫生工作者对医疗保健可及性变化的印象。两位独立作者使用NVIVO进行专题分析;以协商一致意见最后确定了主题。VAP和对照村共享了三个生成的主题:“获得医疗保健服务的变化”;“促进健康和预防疾病的变化”和“不平等及其对健康的影响”。第四个主题是“对将农村行动计划扩展到非农村行动计划的看法”,这是为对照组独特产生的。缺乏卫生教育和卫生设施,以及社会污名,在方案建立之前被列为健康障碍;大多数与会者认为,自VAP实施以来,这些问题已基本得到解决。在尼泊尔农村低收入地区现有的社区卫生保健系统基础上实施更全面的初级卫生保健是可行的。与会者认为,VAP增进了对麻风病等疾病的了解,这可能有利于未来的垂直干预措施。据报告,在干预组村庄的大多数或所有研究主题中,健康和保健的各个方面都有所改善;对照村的情况也有所改善,但有更多证据表明存在健康障碍。需要进一步研究关键的定量结果,以三角测量结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing the health impacts of implementing a 'Comprehensive Rural Health Project' health system in a low-income region of rural Nepal.

Establishing and building grassroots, community-based healthcare systems is a key approach to improving healthcare access sustainably in low-income regions of the world. One prominent early example of this was the Comprehensive Rural Health Project (CRHP), inspiring the framework for subsequent large-scale programs globally. However, many community health projects do not provide the same breadth of services as CRHP, which may have impacts on health outcomes. This qualitative study focused on 12 Dalit villages in rural Nepal following an intervention - known as the Village Alive Project (VAP) - to boost healthcare provision through a CRHP-style health system. Villagers' and health workers' impressions of changes in healthcare access were assessed through 42 semi-structured interviews. Thematic analysis was performed using NVIVO by two independent authors; themes were finalized by reaching consensus. Three generated themes were shared by VAP and control villages: 'changes in access to healthcare services'; 'changes in health promotion and disease prevention' and 'inequalities and their effects on health'. A fourth theme, 'views on the expansion of VAP to non-VAP villages', was generated uniquely for the control group. Lack of health education and sanitation facilities, as well as social stigma, were listed as barriers to health prior to VAP's establishment; most participants felt these have been largely addressed since the arrival of VAP. Implementing more comprehensive primary healthcare on top of pre-existing community-based healthcare systems is feasible, with encouraging findings from this low-income region of rural Nepal. Participants felt VAP improved understanding of diseases such as leprosy, which may benefit future vertical interventions. Improvements in various aspects of health and healthcare were reported for most or all study themes across intervention-group villages; improvements were also noted in control villages but with more evidence of ongoing barriers to health. Further studies looking at key quantitative outcomes are required to triangulate findings.

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