南非公共部门获得医疗辅助生殖:个案研究。

IF 3.4 Q2 REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Reproduction & fertility Pub Date : 2025-07-10 Print Date: 2025-07-01 DOI:10.1530/RAF-24-0072
Gerhardus Marthinus Boshoff, Willem Ombelet, Carin Huyser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在南非,由于获得医疗辅助生殖服务的机会有限和不平等,大约10%的计算需求得到了满足。为了便于了解与获得辅助生殖有关的挑战,在南非一家提供此类服务的公立医院进行了为期六年的回顾性案例研究。调查了寻求怀孕援助的患者的人口概况,包括收入、居住地区和获得医疗保险的情况。将患者分为仅接受诊断调查的患者和返回治疗程序的患者,并确定两组之间人口统计学特征的差异。这项调查显示,来自低收入分类组的患者,没有医疗保险,往往比那些高收入和医疗保险的患者更少返回治疗程序,即使这些低收入患者有资格获得治疗程序补贴。当病人的数量随着路程的增加而减少时,存在着反比关系,但是那些需要走得更远的辅助生殖治疗的病人往往比那些住得离医疗机构更近的病人更经常地返回这些程序。最后,该区域使用医疗辅助生殖设施的机会严重不足和有限。为了减轻患者的旅行距离,需要有可接近诊所的替代初级诊断路线,还应重新评估公共部门治疗程序的费用,以便以可负担得起的价格向边缘化患者提供服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

FERTILITY CARE IN LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: Public sector access to medically assisted reproduction in South Africa: a case study.

FERTILITY CARE IN LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: Public sector access to medically assisted reproduction in South Africa: a case study.

FERTILITY CARE IN LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: Public sector access to medically assisted reproduction in South Africa: a case study.

FERTILITY CARE IN LOW- AND MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES: Public sector access to medically assisted reproduction in South Africa: a case study.

Abstract: In South Africa, approximately 10% of the calculated need for medically assisted reproduction is being met due to limited access and unequal availability of these services. To facilitate understanding of challenges associated with access to assisted reproduction, a retrospective case study spanning 6 years was performed at one public sector hospital in South Africa offering these services. Demographic profiles, including income, region of residency and access to medical insurance, of patients seeking assistance to become pregnant were investigated. Patients were categorised as those who underwent diagnostic investigations only vs those who returned for therapeutic procedures, and the difference in demographic profiles between the two groups was determined. This investigation showed that patients from the lower-income classification group, without medical insurance, tend to return for therapeutic procedures less often than those with a higher income and medical insurance, even though these low-income patients qualify for a therapeutic procedure subsidy. An inverse relationship existed where patient numbers decreased as their travel distance increased, but patients who were required to travel further for assisted reproductive therapy tended to return for these procedures more often than patients who resided closer to the medical facility. In conclusion, access to medically assisted reproduction facilities is critically undersupplied and limited in the region. In order to ease the travel distance of patients, alternative primary diagnostic routes with accessible clinics are needed. In addition, costs of therapeutic procedures in the public sector should be re-evaluated to be offered at affordable rates for marginalised patients.

Lay summary: In South Africa, about 10% of patients who need assistance to become pregnant are being helped. To better understand this phenomenon, researchers considered information about patients from a public sector hospital in South Africa. This includes how much money the patients earned, how far they travelled to the hospital and whether they had medical insurance. The patients were grouped into those who requested initial investigations but never returned for treatments, and those who returned for medical treatment. The differences between these groups were then evaluated. The research showed that people with less money tend to abandon further treatment more often, or take longer to return, than those with more money. The conclusion drawn is that assisted reproductive therapy is too expensive and that more IVF clinics are needed, using cheaper and simpler procedures of the same quality.

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