西非次区域II型糖尿病初级保健管理的障碍和促进因素:范围审查

PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-05-05 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0003733
Abdul-Basit Abdul-Samed, Yasmin Jahan, Veronika Reichenberger, Ellen Barnie Peprah, Mary Pomaa Agyekum, Henry Lawson, Dina Balabanova, Tolib Mirzoev, Irene Akua Agyepong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

整个西非的糖尿病患病率正在迅速上升,对公共卫生构成重大挑战。通过可获得和高质量的初级卫生保健进行有效的糖尿病管理至关重要,但仍存在多重障碍。本综述旨在综合影响西非糖尿病初级保健可及性、利用和质量因素的现有证据。根据Arksey和O'Malley的框架和PRISMA-ScR指南,我们检索了四个电子数据库(PubMed, Scopus, b谷歌Scholar, CAIRN Info)和灰色文献来源。入选标准包括:2000-2023年间以英语或法语发表的同行评议研究;西非国家成人II型糖尿病护理的初步研究;以及报告影响初级卫生保健获取、利用或质量的因素的研究。使用标准化表格提取数据,并通过整合世卫组织初级卫生保健框架、健康的社会决定因素模型和慢性病创新护理模型的框架综合分析。12项研究被纳入,分别来自尼日利亚(n=7)、加纳(n=4)和塞内加尔(n=1)。确定获取、利用和质量方面的主要障碍是卫生系统缺陷,包括基础设施不足、劳动力短缺、供应缺口、护理协调分散、缺乏标准化指南、护理成本高以及慢性病管理的领导/治理效率低下。更广泛的健康决定因素,如贫困、性别、文化信仰、对传统医学的依赖以及卫生政策差距,对保健的获得和利用产生了重大影响。个人层面的障碍,如心理困扰和寻求护理的延迟也很重要。家庭/社会支持系统成为获得和利用初级保健服务的潜在促进者。我们的综述发现,为了改善糖尿病护理,西非需要针对具体情况的模式,使土著治疗实践与初级保健相结合,加强卫生系统,并解决社会文化决定因素。未来的研究应侧重于开发和评估文化上的共鸣干预措施,这些干预措施可以在资源受限的环境中处理影响糖尿病管理的生物医学和社会文化因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Barriers and facilitators of primary care management of type II diabetes mellitus in the West African sub-region: A scoping review.

The prevalence of diabetes is rising rapidly across West Africa, posing a significant public health challenge. Effective diabetes management through accessible and quality primary healthcare is crucial, yet multiple barriers persist. This review aimed to synthesise the available evidence on factors influencing access, utilisation, and quality of diabetes primary care in West Africa. Following Arksey and O'Malley's framework and PRISMA-ScR guidelines, we searched four electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, CAIRN Info) and grey literature sources. Eligibility criteria included: peer-reviewed studies published between 2000-2023 in English or French; primary research focusing on adult type II diabetes care in West African countries; and studies reporting on factors affecting access, utilisation, or quality of primary healthcare. Data were extracted using a standardised form and analysed through framework synthesis integrating the WHO Primary Health Care Framework, Social Determinants of Health model, and Innovative Care for Chronic Conditions model. Twelve studies were included from Nigeria (n=7), Ghana (n=4), and Senegal (n=1). Key barriers to access, utilisation, and quality were identified as health system deficiencies, including inadequate infrastructure, workforce shortages, supply gaps, fragmented coordination of care, absence of standardised guidelines, high costs of care, and inefficient leadership/governance for chronic disease management. Broader determinants of health, such as poverty, gender, cultural beliefs, reliance on traditional medicine, and health policy gaps, significantly influenced access to and utilisation of care. Individual-level barriers like psychological distress and delays in care-seeking were also significant. Family/social support systems emerged as potential facilitators of accessing and utilising PHC services. Our review identified that to improve diabetes care, West Africa needs context-specific models that align indigenous healing practices with PHC, strengthen health systems, and address sociocultural determinants. Future research should focus on developing and evaluating culturally resonant interventions that can navigate both biomedical and sociocultural factors shaping diabetes management in resource-constrained settings.

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