| Literature DB >> 28588985 |
Stephanie M Topp1,2, Julien M Chipukuma3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In sub-Saharan Africa, large amounts of funding continue to be directed towards HIV-specific care and treatment, often with claims of 'health system strengthening' effect. Such claims rarely account for the impact on human relationships and decisions that are core to functional health systems. This research examined how establishment of externally funded HIV services influenced trusting relationships in Zambian health centres.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28588985 PMCID: PMC5321392 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2016-000179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Conceptual Framework (adapted from Okello and Gilson).57
Demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of districts where study sites were located*
| Lusaka | Chongwe | |
|---|---|---|
| Total households | 368 364 | 37 573 |
| Total population | 1 742 979 | 187 969 |
| Average annual rate | 4.9% | 3.2% |
| Male population (%) | 852 588 (49%) | 93 934 (50%) |
| Population density | 4841.6 | 21.7 |
| District welfare (FOD)† rank | 5/74 | 13/74 |
*Sources: 2010 Census of Population and Housing;49 Comparison of Welfare Status of Districts in Zambia, ZIPAR, 2014.50
†FOD, First Order Dominance; ranking based on relative deprivation in relation to access to: sanitation, employment, housing, electricity and education.
Study sites: operational characteristics and common features of HIV service scale up
| Demographic features | Health centre 1 | Health centre 2 | Health centre 3 | Health centre 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Designation | Urban | Rural | Urban | Peri-Urban |
| Official catchment population* | 62 579 | 15 000 | 101 972 | 43 850 |
| Service departments | OPD, MCH, TB, ART, laboratory, EH | OPD, MCH, TB, ART, IPD, laboratory, LABOUR, EH | OPD, MCH,TB, ART, laboratory, EH | OPD, MCH, TB, ART, IPD, laboratory, LABOUR, EH |
| Professional staff* | 41 | 5 | 46 | 22 |
| Lay staff*,† | 29 | 5 | 46 | 12 |
| Common features of ART clinic establishment (c. 2005–2008) |
New stand-alone building for ART clinic in three sites (HC1, HC3, HC4) Externally funded/supported supply chain and laboratory services Recruitment and training of adult and paediatric peer educators/establishment of peer support groups NGO funded/run in-service training for select professional staff Donor-funded ‘overtime’ payments for professional staff (HC1, HC3, HC4) NGO-supported quality assurance systems Electronic medical records in three sites (HC1, HC3, HC4); ART specific stationary at all sites | |||
| Common features of ART clinic scale-up and transition (c. 2009–2011) |
Extension of HIV in-service training to all professional staff Removal of donor-funded overtime payments (HC1, HC3, HC4) Formal inclusion of ART clinic services in routine duties of all professional staff Scale-back in NGO support for lay personnel (including peer educators and defaulter tracing) Scale-back in NGO support for quality assurance programmes Externally funded, but MOH-managed HIV supply chain | |||
*At the time of study.
†Includes paid or stipendiary lay staff with formal terms of reference; does not include ad hoc voluntary lay staff.
ART, antiretroviral therapy clinic; EH, environmental health department; IPD, inpatient department; Labour, labour ward; MCH, maternal and child health department; NGO, non-governmental organisation; OPD, outpatient department; TB, tuberculosis treatment department.
Illustrative quotes demonstrating patients' perceptions of health workers in different departments in four study sites
| HC1 | HC2 | HC3 | HC4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ART clinic | The nurses should be kind. They should know that they are dealing with people who are sick. If they feel that there is the work load they should be frustrated with the government not to us. [Female, HIV] | The clinic should have time to people who are on ARVs and they should pay more time and ask them what problems they face. [Female, HIV] | This clinic is fine but the ART department the health workers are very slow. [Male, HIV] | In my experience, nurses should be nicer with the patients, not shouting at us. And they should teach these clerks how to handle files so they don't get lost. [Female, HIV] |
| Maternal and child health department | My experiences are that most of the time the CO and nurses spend most of their time discussing unnecessary stories. They even go for lunch early. [Female, MCH] | This clinic they don't take patients to be important. So you find that they shout at us sometimes even when we are right. [Female, MCH] | Nurses work very well but sometimes they are slow. [Female, MCH] | When you come for family planning they tell you to buy the drugs for injection. That is very bad and instead of telling us in a polite way they shout at you. [Female, MCH] |
| Outpatient Department | Health workers should be serious, not like nurses [now] they are just chatting here. [Female, OPD] | Time, they always start very late as I have told you, we reach here mostly at 6 hrs and they start attending to you around 9 hrs. [Female, OPD] | The members of staff should stop getting money from patients to collect their drugs. If you don't have money here then you go home very late [Female, OPD] | The problem is with the nurses who are very harsh with patients. Sometimes they shout at some patients [Male, OPD] |
ART, antiretroviral therapy clinic; MCH, maternal and child health department; OPD, outpatient department.
Figure 2Impact of establishment phase on trust in (A) the ART clinic and (B) broader health centre. ART, antiretroviral therapy clinic.
Figure 3Impact of transition phase on trust in ART clinic and broader health centre. ART, antiretroviral therapy clinic; MOH, Ministry of Health; NGO, non-governmental organisation.