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Hospital-provision of essential primary care in 56 countries: determinants and quality.

Authors :
Arsenault C
Kim MK
Aryal A
Faye A
Joseph JP
Kassa M
Degfie TT
Yahya T
Kruk ME
Source :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization [Bull World Health Organ] 2020 Nov 01; Vol. 98 (11), pp. 735-746D. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Aug 27.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective: To estimate the use of hospitals for four essential primary care services offered in health centres in low- and middle-income countries and to explore differences in quality between hospitals and health centres.<br />Methods: We extracted data from all demographic and health surveys conducted since 2010 on the type of facilities used for obtaining contraceptives, routine antenatal care and care for minor childhood diarrhoea and cough or fever. Using mixed-effects logistic regression models we assessed associations between hospital use and individual and country-level covariates. We assessed competence of care based on the receipt of essential clinical actions during visits. We also analysed three indicators of user experience from countries with available service provision assessment survey data.<br />Findings: On average across 56 countries, public hospitals were used as the sole source of care by 16.9% of 126 012 women who obtained contraceptives, 23.1% of 418 236 women who received routine antenatal care, 19.9% of 47 677 children with diarrhoea and 18.5% of 82 082 children with fever or cough. Hospital use was more common in richer countries with higher expenditures on health per capita and among urban residents and wealthier, better-educated women. Antenatal care quality was higher in hospitals in 44 countries. In a subset of eight countries, people using hospitals tended to spend more, report more problems and be somewhat less satisfied with the care received.<br />Conclusion: As countries work towards achieving ambitious health goals, they will need to assess care quality and user preferences to deliver effective primary care services that people want to use.<br /> ((c) 2020 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1564-0604
Volume :
98
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33177770
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2471/BLT.19.245563