| Literature DB >> 28911338 |
Ermin Erasmus1, Lucy Gilson2,3, Veloshnee Govender4, Moremi Nkosi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper uses the concepts of organisational culture and organisational trust to explore the implementation of equity-oriented policies - the Uniform Patient Fee Schedule (UPFS) and Patients' Rights Charter (PRC) - in two South African district hospitals. It contributes to the small literatures on organisational culture and trust in low- and middle-income country health systems, and broader work on health systems' people-centeredness and "software".Entities:
Keywords: Equity; Hardware; Organisational culture; Organisational trust; Patients’ rights charter; People-centeredness; Policy implementation; Software; South Africa; Uniform patient fee schedule
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28911338 PMCID: PMC5599896 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-017-0659-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Overview of the policies of focus
| Uniform Patient Fee Schedule |
| After national-level approval, the UPFS was implemented across provinces in 2001/2. It sought to ensure the uniform billing of public hospital patients and stipulated that certain services, for example primary care and services to pregnant women and children younger than 6 years, were free of charge to all or almost all (members of health insurance schemes were, for example, excluded from certain free services). Other services were charged according to the patient’s income sources and levels and, where applicable, other factors such as health insurance membership and non-South African citizenship. Patients were classified as H0 (fully subsidised), H1 (highly subsidised), H2 (moderately subsidised), and H3 (full public sector rate) [ |
| Patients Rights Charter |
| The PRC, launched in the late 1990s, outlined to patients and health workers the common standards of service and behaviour expected. It was partly intended to rebalance the patient-health system relationship and to bring healthcare provision in line with South Africa’s new constitution, given that during the apartheid era “the vast majority of the South African population has experienced either a denial or violation of fundamental human rights, including rights to health care services” [ |
Qualitative interviews and respondents
| Method | Respondents | Number of respondents | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital A | Hospital B | ||
| Initial narrative interviews | Provincial and regional managers, clinical and non-clinical hospital staff, hospital managers | 47 | 27 |
| Relationship mapping interviews | Hospital managers, clinical and non-clinical hospital staff | 13 | 7 |
| Further in-depth interviews (1) | Hospital board members, patients, district and provincial managers | 25 | 28 |
| Further in-depth interviews (2) | Hospital managers, clinical and non-clinical hospital staff | 30 | 18 |
Structured surveys and respondents
| Method | Respondents | Number of respondents (response rate) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital A: 481 staff | Hospital B: 193 staff | ||
| Organisational trust survey | Sample of all hospital staff | 185 (38%) | 92 (48%) |
| Organisational culture survey | Sample of all hospital staff | 155 (32%) | 77 (40%) |
Fig. 1Organisational culture typology
Fig. 2Organisational culture results: Hospitals A and B
Fig. 3Trust in management in Hospital A
Fig. 4Trust in management in Hospital B
Street-level bureaucrat influences over UPFS implementation
| Behaviour | Rationale underpinning behaviour | |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital A | Clerks rarely informed patients about the possibility of exemptions | Do not delay patient processing by activating difficult exemption processes |
| Clerks occasionally broke the rules to exempt patients without proof of unemployment | Charging obviously unemployed patients from whom you will not recover money artificially inflates the outstanding amount shown in the financial system | |
| Clerks were sometimes rude to patients (as described by patients) | Long queues and frustration at patients not bringing the correct information that would make clerks’ job easier | |
| Medical staff turned back patients who sought care without first reporting to the clerks | Supporting policy implementation | |
| Hospital B | Clerks sometimes used their discretion to classify patients without supporting documents, e.g. exempting patients clearly old enough to be pensioners or classifying patients familiar to the clerks | Applying some common knowledge and sense to the process |
| Clerks sometimes classified patients declaring an income into a higher category than warranted by the declaration | Encouraging patients to bring supporting documents and ensuring they don’t cheat the system |
Source: observations and in-depth interviews in each hospital; researcher judgements based on experience in each hospital
Examples of grudging acceptance of the PRC
| Discourse theme: The PRC does not adequately take account of health workers’ rights |
| “…it (PRC) gives the patients the right, you know, but on the other hand forgetting about the health providers…and at the end of the day we are the ones who are suffering…and at the end of the day we end up being rude to the patients, you know.” (Hospital A, nursing assistant) |
| Discourse theme: Patients know their rights, but not their responsibilities |
| “The challenge, I see the challenge mainly from the patients…they only look at their rights, but they forget that these rights, they go hand-in-hand with the responsibilities. The biggest challenge that we have is to maybe link the responsibilities to the rights because now everybody knows his right” (Hospital A, nurse) |
| Discourse theme: The PRC leaves providers open to abuse, with no recourse |
| “Patients can abuse the staff, but the staff can’t do anything. How much abuse can nurses take?” (Hospital B, nurse) |
Source: interview data