| Literature DB >> 32252764 |
Marta Jimenez Carrillo1, Montserrat León García2,3, Nicole Vidal2, Keven Bermúdez2, Pol De Vos2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One of today's greatest challenges in public health worldwide - and especially its key management from Primary Health Care (PHC) - is the growing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). In El Salvador, since 2009 the Minister of Health (MoH) has scaled up a national public health system based on a comprehensive PHC approach. A national multi-sectorial strategic plan for a comprehensive approach to NCDs has also been developed. This analysis explores stakeholders' perceptions related to the management of NCDs in PHC and, in particular, the role of social participation.Entities:
Keywords: Community participation; Comprehensive primary health care; El Salvador; Non-communicable diseases
Year: 2020 PMID: 32252764 PMCID: PMC7132977 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-020-1140-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Chronic patients interviewed and Staff member interviewed working at different levels of PHC
| Chronic Patients | NCD suffered | Sex | Age | Marital status | Children | Level of education | Occupation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Hypertension | F | 44 | Accompained | 6 | Primary education (until 8 years old) | Homemaker |
| 2. | Hypertension | F | 77 | Married | 6 (2 died) | Primary education | Seamstress |
| 3. | DM type 2 | F | 57 | Married | 12 (5 died) | Illiterate | Street food vendor |
| 4. | Hypertension | F | 70 | Married | 6 | – | Homemaker |
| 5. | Hypertension | M | 77 | Widow | 6 | Primary education | Farmer |
| 6. | DM type 2 | F | 62 | Widow | – | Basic (1 year) | Domestic worker |
| 7. | Hypertension + CKD | F | 49 | Separated | 4 | Primary education | Homemaker |
| 8. | Hypertension | F | 70 | Accompained | 8 (2 died) | Primary education | Homemaker |
| 9. | DM type 2 | F | 61 | Married | 3 | Illiterate | Homemaker |
| 10. | CKD | M | 58 | Married | 6 | Primary education | Farmer |
| 11. | Hypertension | M | 80 | Married | 4 | Illiterate | Farmer |
| 12. | Hypertension + CKD | M | 66 | Accompained | 6 (2 died) | Illiterate | Farmer |
| 13. | Hypertension + CKD | F | 61 | Married | 3 | Illiterate | Homemaker |
| 14. | Hypertension | F | 64 | Married | 7 | Primary education | Cook |
| PHC staff | Professional profile | Sex | |||||
| Coordination level | 1.Departamental Coordinator | Male (M) | |||||
| 2.&3.Intermunicipal coordinators | M | ||||||
| 4.Regional coordinator | M | ||||||
| Interdisciplinary PHC team | 5. Health educator | Female (F) | |||||
| 6.Sanitary inspector | F | ||||||
| 7.Medical student completing year of social service | M | ||||||
| 8.General practitioner | M | ||||||
| 9.Family doctor | F | ||||||
| 10.Nurses | F | ||||||
| 11.Pharmacist | F | ||||||
| 12.Laboratory technician | M | ||||||
Coding and thematic framework
| Themes | PHC Organisation in El Salvador | NCD Management in PHC | Social Participation in PHC |
|---|---|---|---|
| CODES | Integrated comprehensive health networks Community health networks and interdisciplinary PHC teams Coordination between levels of care Intersectoral participation and health in all policies Accessibility Quality of care | Health policies for the management of NCDs Prevention of NCDs and health promotion Longitudinal care of NCDs | National Health Forum Accountability Right to Health offices Community-based peer support groups for NCDs |
Fig. 1Integrated and comprehensive health networks and management councils (left section), social participation spaces and intersectoral participation (right section)
Perception of quality of care in PHC
| Quality of care | Conclusions | Illustrative stakeholder’s quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Quality of care provided by health workers in PHC | Chronic patients mainly expressed having received adequate care. | |
| Waiting time | Waiting time is shorter in PHC than in hospitals. In PHC, the waiting time for specialist consultants who attend patients by appointment was shorter than the GP’s (waking patients)". | |
| Attention time in consultation | Health workers take the necessary time. Family doctors have 15 min per patient. | |
| Health workers’ communication skills | Communication is adequately adapted to the educational level of individual patients, while also engaging with the chronic patients’ families (especially cases where the patient may be illiterate or advanced in age). | |
| Health information quality | The majority of the discourse of the interviewed chronic patients responded positively when asked about the quality of the information given to them by the health staff in PHC. |
Health policies for the management of NCDs in PHC
Knowledge and capacity building in NCDs | |
| Having specific protocols and intervention plans | |
| Coordination throughout the healthcare system | |
| Intersectoral participation | |
| Interventions focused on prevention and health promotion | |
| More medication and medical supplies | |
| Better prioritization of resources | |
| Community engagement | |
| Medical specialists at the community level | |
Epidemiological surveillance of NCDs -Morbidity and mortality database (SIMMOW) -Map of health inequalities |
Prevention of NCDs in PHC
| Primary prevention | |
| Biological and environmental Risk Maps. | |
| Comprehensive diet programs. | |
| “Healthy passport, Exercise is medicine” program. | |
| Screening programs for Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). | |
| Information talks of the Specialized ECOS with special focus in NCDs. | |
| Secondary prevention | |
| Community-based peer groups for people living with an NCD | |
| Terciary prevention | |
| Prevention of complication of Diabetes | |
| Prevention of complication of CKD. | |
Pathways to care of NCDs in PHC