初级卫生保健落后:对埃塞俄比亚残疾人卫生保健经验的定性探索。

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-09-26 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0005147
Desta Debalkie Atnafu, Hannah Kuper, Femke Bannink Mbazzi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球有13亿残疾人,由于一系列障碍,他们经常被系统性地排除在医疗保健之外。本定性研究探讨了埃塞俄比亚巴希尔达尔市30名成年残疾人获得医疗保健服务的经历,旨在确定障碍、促进因素和情境驱动的解决方案。目的抽样和滚雪球抽样都是为了确定参与者。深入的采访是用当地语言进行的。在缺失的十亿卫生系统框架服务提供部分的指导下,使用NVivo 14中的反身性专题分析对数据进行了分析。该研究确定了障碍、促进因素和应对策略的五个关键主题。主要障碍包括卫生知识普及程度低、负担不起的护理、提供者的消极态度、无法获得基础设施以及缺乏辅助技术和康复服务。促进因素包括家庭支助、社区医疗保险、对保健工作者进行对残疾问题敏感的培训、设立康复中心以及开始改造示范设施的基础设施。与会者提出了可操作的战略,例如提高认识、保险覆盖面、在当地生产辅助技术、在保健设施中指派个人助理、改善无障碍条件以及在治理结构中设立残疾部门。在埃塞俄比亚,残疾人在获得医疗保健服务方面遇到了持续存在的交叉障碍。然而,扩大残疾人包容性培训、基础设施改善和治理改革——立足于实际经验并与残疾人人权保持一致——可以帮助推动全民健康覆盖取得进展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Left behind in primary healthcare: A qualitative exploration of healthcare experiences of people with disabilities in Ethiopia.

Left behind in primary healthcare: A qualitative exploration of healthcare experiences of people with disabilities in Ethiopia.

Left behind in primary healthcare: A qualitative exploration of healthcare experiences of people with disabilities in Ethiopia.

Left behind in primary healthcare: A qualitative exploration of healthcare experiences of people with disabilities in Ethiopia.

People with disabilities, who make up 1.3 billion globally, frequently face systemic exclusion from healthcare due to a range of barriers. This qualitative study explored the healthcare access experiences of 30 adults with disabilities in Bahir Dar City, Ethiopia, aiming to identify barriers, facilitators, and context-driven solutions. Both purposive and snowball sampling was conducted to identify participants. In-depth interviews were conducted in the local language. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis in NVivo 14, guided by the Missing Billion Health System Framework service delivery components. The study identified five key themes each for barriers, facilitators, and coping strategies. Major barriers included low health literacy, unaffordable care, negative provider attitudes, inaccessible infrastructure, and lack of assistive technologies and rehabilitation services. Facilitators included family support, community-based health insurance, disability-sensitive training of healthcare workers, presence of a rehabilitation centre, and initiation of renovation infrastructure in model facilities. Participants proposed actionable strategies such as increasing awareness, insurance coverage, local production of assistive technologies, assigning personal assistants in health facilities, improving accessibility, and establishing disability units within governance structures. People with disabilities experienced persistent, intersecting barriers to healthcare access in Ethiopia. However, scaling disability-inclusive training, infrastructure improvemnts, and governance reforms-rooted in lived experience and aligned with human rights of people with disabilities-can help drive progress toward Universal Health Coverage.

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