印度多专科医院附近家长就医行为的地理空间分析。

International Journal of MCH and AIDS Pub Date : 2024-06-28 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.25259/IJMA_628
Anjali Pal, Sunil Kumar Panigrahi, Pragyan Paramita Parija, Sagarika Majumdar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:弱势群体(如五岁以下儿童)的就医行为取决于多种因素,包括照顾者的决策。大约 60% 的印度人在私立医院就医。印度最近的卫生政策倾向于建立多专科医院。然而,这项政策在多大程度上改变了印度人在这些政府设立的多专科医院就医的人数,目前仍不清楚。本研究旨在评估一家公立多专科三级医院附近的五岁以下儿童家长的就医行为:这是一项基于社区的横断面调查,使用 Epi-collect 移动应用程序中的半结构式问卷对五岁以下儿童的父母进行地理空间绘图。研究地点是印度中部恰蒂斯加尔邦一家多专科三级公立医院集水区(五公里以内)的城市贫民窟。研究从 2019 年 2 月至 2020 年 1 月进行,为期一年。五岁以下儿童的父母(N = 353)在附近的 Anganwadi 中心(妇女和儿童发展部(WCD)儿童综合发展计划下的社区级服务中心)进行入户确认后,接受了问卷调查。问卷包括人口特征、子女患病情况、寻求健康决策等部分。采用数字和百分比进行描述性分析。单变量分析用于评估社会人口学变量与寻求健康特征之间的关联。统计意义以 P 值小于 0.05 为准。我们使用 Microsoft Excel 2021 版收集和编制的坐标绘制地理空间图,并使用 QGIS(量子地理信息系统)软件进行分析:在受访的患者父母中(N = 353),母亲识字率超过 85%。约 54% 的家庭处于贫困线以下。在 95.2% 的家庭中,母亲参与了子女就医的决策。超过 92% 的家庭选择到附近的私立医院或药房就诊。无论母亲的社会经济地位或教育程度如何,私立医院的地理空间分布图都是她们首选的就医地点,而不是多专科医院:公立综合专科医院附近的大多数家长都会在私立诊所为五岁以下儿童看病。公立多专科三级护理医院的建立是为了提供三级护理和研究,不能取代初级医疗保健机构。这些基层医疗机构对于就近治疗五岁以下儿童的常见疾病和减轻家庭经济负担至关重要,即使在多专科医院附近也是如此。
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Geospatial Analysis of Parental Healthcare-Seeking Behavior in the Vicinity of Multispecialty Hospital in India.

Background and objective: The healthcare-seeking behavior of vulnerable groups, such as children under five, depends on a multitude of factors, including the caregiver's decision making. Approximately 60% of Indians seek care from private hospitals. Recent health policy in India has favored the establishment of multispecialty hospitals. However, it remains unclear to what extent this policy has changed the number of Indians seeking healthcare from these government-established multispecialty hospitals. The study aims to assess the health-seeking behavior of parents of children under five in the vicinity of a public multispecialty tertiary care hospital.

Methods: This was a community-based cross-sectional survey with geospatial mapping conducted among the parents of children under five using a semi-structured questionnaire in Epi-collect mobile app. The study site was an urban slum in a catchment area [within five kilometers (km)] of a multispecialty tertiary care public hospital in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh. The study was conducted for one year duration from February 2019 to January 2020. A questionnaire was administered to the parents of the children under five (N = 353) after their household confirmation from the nearby Anganwadi center, the community level service providing center under the Integrated Child Development Scheme by the Ministry of Women and Child Development (WCD). The questionnaire included sections for demographic characteristics, the illness pattern among their children, health-seeking decision-making, and more. Descriptive analysis was presented with numbers and percentages. Univariate analysis was used to assess the association between sociodemographic variables and health-seeking characteristics. Statistical significance was considered at p value less than 0.05. We used geospatial mapping using coordinates collected and compiled using the Microsoft Excel version 2021 and analyzed using QGIS (Quantum Geographic Information System) software.

Results: Among the parents interviewed patients (N = 353), maternal literacy rates were over 85%. Approximately 54% of the families were below poverty line. Among 95.2% of the families, mothers were part of decision-making regarding their children's health-seeking. Over 92% of the families opted for consultation in a nearby private hospital or dispensary. Geospatial mapping of private hospitals was a favored place for healthcare-seeking by mothers, irrespective of their socioeconomic status or education rather than multispecialty hospital.

Conclusion and global health implications: The majority of the parents in the vicinity of public multispecialty hospitals seek care from private clinics for ailments for children under five. The establishment of public multispecialty tertiary care hospitals, which are mandated for tertiary level of care and research, cannot replace primary-level healthcare institutions, showed that private hospitals were the favored places healthcare seeking by mothers. These primary-level institutions are critical for the management of common ailments for children under five near home and reducing the financial burden on the family, even in the vicinity of a multispecialty hospital.

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