Understanding the role of lady health workers in improving access to eye health services in rural Pakistan - findings from a qualitative study.

Access to eye health services Community health workers Pakistan Patient compliance with referrals Qualitative methods

Journal

Archives of public health = Archives belges de sante publique
ISSN: 0778-7367
Titre abrégé: Arch Public Health
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9208826

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
17 Feb 2021
Historique:
received: 08 10 2020
accepted: 07 02 2021
entrez: 18 2 2021
pubmed: 19 2 2021
medline: 19 2 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

In 1994, the Lady Health Workers (LHWs) Programme was established in Pakistan to increase access to essential primary care services and support health systems at the household and community levels. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) province in northern Pakistan, eye care is among the many unmet needs that LHWs were trained to address, including screening and referral of people with eye conditions to health facilities. However, despite an increase in referrals by LHWs, compliance with referrals in KPK has been very low. We explored the role of LHWs in patient referral and the barriers to patient compliance with referrals. Qualitative methodology was adopted. Between April and June 2019, we conducted eight focus group discussions and nine in-depth interviews with 73 participants including patients, LHWs and their supervisors, district managers and other stakeholders. Data were analysed thematically using NVivo software version 12. LHWs have a broad understanding of basic health care and are responsible for a wide range of activities at the community level. LHWs felt that the training in primary eye care had equipped them with the skills to identify and refer eye patients. However, they reported that access to care was hampered when referred patients reached hospitals, where disorganised services and poor quality of care discouraged uptake of referrals. LHWs felt that this had a negative impact on their credibility and on the trust and respect they received from the community, which, coupled with low eye health awareness, influenced patients' decisions about whether to comply with a referral. There was a lack of trust in the health care services provided by public sector hospitals. Poverty, deep-rooted gender inequities and transportation were the other reported main drivers of non-adherence to referrals. Results from this study have shown that the training of LHWs in eye care was well received. However, training alone is not enough and does not result in improved access for patients to specialist services if other parts of the health system are not strengthened. Pathways for referrals should be agreed and explicitly communicated to both the health care providers and the patients.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
In 1994, the Lady Health Workers (LHWs) Programme was established in Pakistan to increase access to essential primary care services and support health systems at the household and community levels. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) province in northern Pakistan, eye care is among the many unmet needs that LHWs were trained to address, including screening and referral of people with eye conditions to health facilities. However, despite an increase in referrals by LHWs, compliance with referrals in KPK has been very low. We explored the role of LHWs in patient referral and the barriers to patient compliance with referrals.
METHODS METHODS
Qualitative methodology was adopted. Between April and June 2019, we conducted eight focus group discussions and nine in-depth interviews with 73 participants including patients, LHWs and their supervisors, district managers and other stakeholders. Data were analysed thematically using NVivo software version 12.
RESULTS RESULTS
LHWs have a broad understanding of basic health care and are responsible for a wide range of activities at the community level. LHWs felt that the training in primary eye care had equipped them with the skills to identify and refer eye patients. However, they reported that access to care was hampered when referred patients reached hospitals, where disorganised services and poor quality of care discouraged uptake of referrals. LHWs felt that this had a negative impact on their credibility and on the trust and respect they received from the community, which, coupled with low eye health awareness, influenced patients' decisions about whether to comply with a referral. There was a lack of trust in the health care services provided by public sector hospitals. Poverty, deep-rooted gender inequities and transportation were the other reported main drivers of non-adherence to referrals.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Results from this study have shown that the training of LHWs in eye care was well received. However, training alone is not enough and does not result in improved access for patients to specialist services if other parts of the health system are not strengthened. Pathways for referrals should be agreed and explicitly communicated to both the health care providers and the patients.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33597017
doi: 10.1186/s13690-021-00541-3
pii: 10.1186/s13690-021-00541-3
pmc: PMC7890803
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

20

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Auteurs

Stevens Bechange (S)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan. sbechange@sightsavers.org.

Elena Schmidt (E)

Sightsavers - United Kingdom, Haywards Heath, UK.

Anna Ruddock (A)

Sightsavers - United Kingdom, Haywards Heath, UK.

Itfaq Khaliq Khan (IK)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Munazza Gillani (M)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Anne Roca (A)

Sightsavers - United Kingdom, Haywards Heath, UK.

Imran Nazir (I)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Robina Iqbal (R)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Sandeep Buttan (S)

Sightsavers - India, New Delhi, India.

Muhammed Bilal (M)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Leena Ahmed (L)

Sightsavers Pakistan Country Office, Plot 3-A, Street 7, Sector G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan.

Emma Jolley (E)

Sightsavers - United Kingdom, Haywards Heath, UK.

Classifications MeSH