Literature DB >> 21118537

Iraqi health system in kurdistan region: medical professionals' perspectives on challenges and priorities for improvement.

Nazar P Shabila1, Namir G Al-Tawil, Rebaz Tahir, Falah H Shwani, Abubakir M Saleh, Tariq S Al-Hadithi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The views of medical professionals on efficiency of health system and needs for any changes are very critical and constitute a cornerstone for any health system improvement. This is particularly relevant to Iraqi Kurdistan case as the events of the last few decades have significantly devastated the national Iraqi health system while the necessity for adopting a new health care system is increasingly recognized since 2004. This study aims to examine the regional health system in Iraqi Kurdistan from medical professionals' perspectives and try to define its problems and priorities for improvement.
METHODS: A survey questionnaire was developed and administered to a convenience sample of 250 medical professionals in Erbil governorate. The questionnaire included four items; rating of the quality of services and availability of resources in the health institutions, view on different aspects of the health system, the perceived priority needs for health system improvement and gender and professional characteristics of the respondents.
RESULTS: The response rate to the survey was 83.6%. A high proportion of respondents rated the different aspects of services and resources in the health institutions as weak or very weak including the availability of the required quantity and quality of medicines (68.7%), the availability of sufficient medical equipment and investigation tools (68.7%), and the quality of offered services (65.3%). Around 72% of respondents had a rather negative view on the overall health system. The weak role of medical research, the weak role of professional associations in controlling the system and the inefficient health education were identified as important problems in the current health system (87.9%, 87.1% and 84.9%, respectively). The priority needs of health system improvement included adoption of social insurance for medical care of the poor (82%), enhancing the role of family medicine (77.2%), adopting health insurance system (76.1%) and periodic scientific evaluation of physicians and other health staff (69.8%).
CONCLUSION: Medical professionals were generally unsatisfied with the different aspects of the health system in Iraqi Kurdistan region. A number of problems and different priority needs for health system improvement have been recognized that require to be studied in more details.

Entities:  

Year:  2010        PMID: 21118537      PMCID: PMC3003630          DOI: 10.1186/1752-1505-4-19

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Confl Health        ISSN: 1752-1505            Impact factor:   2.723


  6 in total

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  6 in total
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2.  Doctors as the governing body of the Kurdish health system: exploring upward and downward accountability among physicians and its influence on the adoption of coping behaviours.

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3.  Using Q-methodology to explore people's health seeking behavior and perception of the quality of primary care services.

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Review 4.  Models of care for non-communicable diseases for displaced populations in Iraq: a scoping review.

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5.  The range and diversity of providers' viewpoints towards the Iraqi primary health care system: an exploration using Q-methodology.

Authors:  Nazar P Shabila; Namir G Al-Tawil; Tariq S Al-Hadithi; Egbert Sondorp
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  5 in total

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