城市健康和营养日还是仅仅是免疫日?在印度中部那格浦尔的城市初级保健中心实施城市保健和营养日的障碍和瓶颈。

Sitikantha Banerjee, Kalaiselvi Selvaraj, Kajari Bandyopadhyay, Mubashshera Firdous Khan, Tikesh Bisen, Pradeep Deshmukh
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:本研究旨在评估城市健康和营养日(UHND)的实施状况,并探讨在马哈拉施特拉邦选定的那格浦尔市,社区一级服务提供者所感受到的障碍和瓶颈。材料和方法:本研究采用混合方法,采用三角法设计。使用观察清单进行了初步差距评估。为了解存在的瓶颈和障碍,在卫生服务机构之间进行了焦点小组讨论,并对参与社区动员的一线卫生工作者进行了访谈。结果:儿科补铁叶酸片、补钙片、称重机等药品和物流供应不足。分发常规避孕药具、疟疾检测、尿白蛋白/糖、血红蛋白评估、糖尿病和高血压筛查、痰液收集和定性碘检测包等服务在任何一届开发署期间都没有提供。在执行开发计划署方面发现的主要挑战如下:未得到服务的地区和被遗漏的城市贫民窟;地理边界不明确的超高密度地区分布悖论;将服务范围限制在产前登记和免疫接种,严重忽视其他组成部分;员工培训不理想;空间、后勤和卫生人力不足;社区成员和城市地方机构不参与;监管不力。结论:开发计划署提供的服务的行为、使用和清单远未达到预期目标。为了最佳利用,需要在适当的脆弱性评估之后重新分配开发计划署的会议,最好是在没有得到服务和服务不足的贫民窟。需要将卫生、妇女和儿童部与城市地方机构整合起来,以便进行统一规划、监测和监督。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Urban health and nutrition day or only immunisation day? barriers and bottlenecks in implementing Urban health and nutrition day in an Urban primary health centre of Nagpur, Central India.

Urban health and nutrition day or only immunisation day? barriers and bottlenecks in implementing Urban health and nutrition day in an Urban primary health centre of Nagpur, Central India.

Urban health and nutrition day or only immunisation day? barriers and bottlenecks in implementing Urban health and nutrition day in an Urban primary health centre of Nagpur, Central India.

Background: This study was carried out to evaluate the implementation status of Urban Health and Nutrition Day (UHND) and to explore barriers and bottlenecks as perceived by community-level service providers in the selected city of Nagpur, Maharashtra.

Material and methods: This mixed-method study was conducted using a triangulation design. An initial gap assessment was carried out quantitatively using an observation checklist. Focus group discussion among ASHAs and interviews among frontline health workers involved in community mobilisation were carried out to understand the bottlenecks and barriers.

Results: Supplies of drugs and logistics, like paediatric iron and folic acid tablets, calcium tablets, and weighing machines, were inadequate. Services like distribution of conventional contraceptives, testing for malaria, urine albumin/sugar, haemoglobin estimation, screening for diabetes and hypertension, sputum collection, and qualitative iodine test kits are not available in any of the UHND sessions. Major challenges in the implementation of UHND were found to be as follows: unserved areas and left-out urban slum pockets; the distribution paradox of UHND location with an ill-defined geographic boundary; restriction of range of services to antenatal registration and immunisation with gross neglect of other components; suboptimal training of staff; insufficient availability of space, logistics, and health manpower; non-involvement of community members and Urban Local Bodies; and poor monitoring and supervision.

Conclusion: The conduct, use, and list of services offered in UHND are far from the desired goal. For optimal use, reallocation of the UHND sessions, preferably in unserved and underserved slums, need to be carried out after suitable vulnerability assessment. Integration of the Health, Women, and Child Department and Urban Local Bodies is required for convergent planning, monitoring, and supervision.

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