A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users

Abstract Background Universal health coverage is one of the Sustainable Development Goal targets known to improve population health and reduce financial burden. There is little qualitative data on access to and quality of primary healthcare in East and West Africa. The aim of this study was to descr...

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Main Authors: Soter Ameh, Bolarinwa Oladimeji Akeem, Caleb Ochimana, Abayomi Olabayo Oluwasanu, Shukri F. Mohamed, Samson Okello, Alfa Muhihi, Goodarz Danaei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-021-01394-z
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spelling doaj-f7a8d238510e4abc9c867642a4a7404d2021-03-11T11:57:52ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962021-02-0122111210.1186/s12875-021-01394-zA qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and usersSoter Ameh0Bolarinwa Oladimeji Akeem1Caleb Ochimana2Abayomi Olabayo Oluwasanu3Shukri F. Mohamed4Samson Okello5Alfa Muhihi6Goodarz Danaei7Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, College of Medical Sciences, University of CalabarLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthLown Scholars Program, Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public HealthAbstract Background Universal health coverage is one of the Sustainable Development Goal targets known to improve population health and reduce financial burden. There is little qualitative data on access to and quality of primary healthcare in East and West Africa. The aim of this study was to describe the viewpoints of healthcare users, healthcare providers and other stakeholders on health-seeking behaviour, access to and quality of healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa. Methods A qualitative study was conducted in four communities in Nigeria and one community each in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania in 2018. Purposive sampling was used to recruit: 155 respondents (mostly healthcare users) for 24 focus group discussions, 25 healthcare users, healthcare providers and stakeholders for in-depth interviews and 11 healthcare providers and stakeholders for key informant interviews. The conceptual framework in this study combined elements of the Health Belief Model, Health Care Utilisation Model, four ‘As’ of access to care, and pathway model to better understand the a priori themes on access to and quality of primary healthcare as well as health-seeking behaviours of the study respondents. A content analysis of the data was done using MAXQDA 2018 qualitative software to identify these a priori themes and emerging themes. Results Access to primary healthcare in the seven communities was limited, especially use of health insurance. Quality of care was perceived to be unacceptable in public facilities whereas cost of care was unaffordable in private facilities. Health providers and users as well as stakeholders highlighted shortage of equipment, frequent drug stock-outs and long waiting times as major issues, but had varying opinions on satisfaction with care. Use of herbal medicines and other traditional treatments delayed or deterred seeking modern healthcare in the Nigerian sites. Conclusions There was a substantial gap in primary healthcare coverage and quality in the selected communities in rural and urban East and West Africa. Alternative models of healthcare delivery that address social and health inequities, through affordable health insurance, can be used to fill this gap and facilitate achieving universal health coverage.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-021-01394-zAccessQualityPrimary healthcareUniversal health coverageHealth-seeking behaviourSocial entrepreneurship
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Soter Ameh
Bolarinwa Oladimeji Akeem
Caleb Ochimana
Abayomi Olabayo Oluwasanu
Shukri F. Mohamed
Samson Okello
Alfa Muhihi
Goodarz Danaei
spellingShingle Soter Ameh
Bolarinwa Oladimeji Akeem
Caleb Ochimana
Abayomi Olabayo Oluwasanu
Shukri F. Mohamed
Samson Okello
Alfa Muhihi
Goodarz Danaei
A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
BMC Family Practice
Access
Quality
Primary healthcare
Universal health coverage
Health-seeking behaviour
Social entrepreneurship
author_facet Soter Ameh
Bolarinwa Oladimeji Akeem
Caleb Ochimana
Abayomi Olabayo Oluwasanu
Shukri F. Mohamed
Samson Okello
Alfa Muhihi
Goodarz Danaei
author_sort Soter Ameh
title A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
title_short A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
title_full A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
title_fullStr A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa (SevenCEWA): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
title_sort qualitative inquiry of access to and quality of primary healthcare in seven communities in east and west africa (sevencewa): perspectives of stakeholders, healthcare providers and users
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Universal health coverage is one of the Sustainable Development Goal targets known to improve population health and reduce financial burden. There is little qualitative data on access to and quality of primary healthcare in East and West Africa. The aim of this study was to describe the viewpoints of healthcare users, healthcare providers and other stakeholders on health-seeking behaviour, access to and quality of healthcare in seven communities in East and West Africa. Methods A qualitative study was conducted in four communities in Nigeria and one community each in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania in 2018. Purposive sampling was used to recruit: 155 respondents (mostly healthcare users) for 24 focus group discussions, 25 healthcare users, healthcare providers and stakeholders for in-depth interviews and 11 healthcare providers and stakeholders for key informant interviews. The conceptual framework in this study combined elements of the Health Belief Model, Health Care Utilisation Model, four ‘As’ of access to care, and pathway model to better understand the a priori themes on access to and quality of primary healthcare as well as health-seeking behaviours of the study respondents. A content analysis of the data was done using MAXQDA 2018 qualitative software to identify these a priori themes and emerging themes. Results Access to primary healthcare in the seven communities was limited, especially use of health insurance. Quality of care was perceived to be unacceptable in public facilities whereas cost of care was unaffordable in private facilities. Health providers and users as well as stakeholders highlighted shortage of equipment, frequent drug stock-outs and long waiting times as major issues, but had varying opinions on satisfaction with care. Use of herbal medicines and other traditional treatments delayed or deterred seeking modern healthcare in the Nigerian sites. Conclusions There was a substantial gap in primary healthcare coverage and quality in the selected communities in rural and urban East and West Africa. Alternative models of healthcare delivery that address social and health inequities, through affordable health insurance, can be used to fill this gap and facilitate achieving universal health coverage.
topic Access
Quality
Primary healthcare
Universal health coverage
Health-seeking behaviour
Social entrepreneurship
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-021-01394-z
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