印度尼西亚地区一级的卫生设施。

Peter Heywood, Nida P Harahap
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引用次数: 36

摘要

背景:印度尼西亚政府在独立时继承了一个薄弱和分布不均的卫生系统,大多数人口只能有限地获得该系统。对此,政府决定增加设施的数量,并将其设置在离市民更近的地方。为了给这些保健设施配备人员,政府对所有医学、护理和助产专业的新毕业生实行强制性政府服务。这些工作人员中的大多数也在他们所在的地区开办了私人诊所。卫生信息系统几乎没有关于这些工作人员为私人执业建立的卫生保健设施的信息。本文报告了在爪哇15个县列举所有卫生设施的结果。方法:我们按类型枚举爪哇15个县的所有公共和私营医疗机构。结果:统计结果显示,各区卫生保健机构的数量远高于大多数报告和卫生信息系统所显示的,卫生信息系统主要集中在公共、多提供者设施。在15个地区中:86%的设施是门诊服务的单独提供者设施;13%是门诊服务的多提供者设施;1%是同时提供门诊和住院服务的多提供者设施。结论:印度尼西亚通过在街道一级建立公共卫生中心,并通过医生、护士和助产士的义务服务制度为其配备人员,实现了相对良好的卫生设施分布。随后,这些公共部门工作人员也为自己的私人执业建立了单独提供者设施;这些单独提供服务的设施,其中护士的设施几乎占一半,构成了门诊护理设施的最大类别,大多数不包括在官方统计数据中。现在,印尼不再对刚毕业的医生、护士和助产士实行强制性服务,维持上世纪80年代建立的医疗设施和医疗机构的分布将会有困难。当前的挑战是设想一个新的卫生系统,以应对不断变化的疾病模式以及卫生设施分布的变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health facilities at the district level in Indonesia.

Background: At Independence the Government of Indonesia inherited a weak and unevenly distributed health system to which much of the population had only limited access. In response, the government decided to increase the number of facilities and to locate them closer to the people. To staff these health facilities the government introduced obligatory government service for all new graduates in medicine, nursing and midwifery. Most of these staff also established private practices in the areas in which they were located. The health information system contains little information on the health care facilities established for private practice by these staff. This article reports on the results of enumerating all health facilities in 15 districts in Java.

Methods: We enumerated all healthcare facilities, public and private, by type in each of 15 districts in Java.

Results: The enumeration showed a much higher number of healthcare facilities in each district than is shown in most reports and in the health information system which concentrates on public, multi-provider facilities. Across the 15 districts: 86% of facilities were solo-provider facilities for outpatient services; 13% were multi-provider facilities for outpatient services; and 1% were multi-provider facilities offering both outpatient and inpatient services.

Conclusion: The relatively good distribution of health facilities in Indonesia was achieved through establishing public health centers at the sub-district level and staffing them through a system of compulsory service for doctors, nurses and midwives. Subsequently, these public sector staff also established solo-provider facilities for their own private practice; these solo-provider facilities, of which those for nurses are almost half, comprise the largest category of outpatient care facilities, most are not included in official statistics. Now that Indonesia no longer has mandatory service for newly graduated doctors, nurses and midwives, it will have difficulty maintaining the distribution of facilities and providers established through the 1980s. The current challenge is to envision a new health system that responds to the changing disease patterns as well as the changes in distribution of health facilities.

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