| Literature DB >> 32778121 |
Scholastica M Zakayo1, Rita W Njeru2, Gladys Sanga2, Mary N Kimani2, Anderson Charo2, Kui Muraya2, Haribondhu Sarma3, Md Fakhar Uddin3, James A Berkley2,4, Judd L Walson5, Maureen Kelley6, Vicki Marsh2,4,6, Sassy Molyneux2,4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Child mortality rates during hospitalisation for acute illness and after discharge are unacceptably high in many under-resourced settings. Childhood vulnerability to recurrent illness, and death, is linked to their families' situations and ability to make choices and act (their agency). We examined vulnerability and agency across treatment-seeking journeys for acutely ill children and considered the implications for policy and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Agency; Childhood acute illness; Treatment-seeking; Vulnerability
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32778121 PMCID: PMC7418306 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-020-01252-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Potential influences on treatment-seeking and outcomes
Example of Household Charts comparing themes
| PID | Length of illness | Length of treatment-seeking | Patterns of treatment-seeking | Influences on treatment-seeking | Other influences | Infor/advice on discharge & adherence | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nature of illness and perceptions of it | Levels of access to cash | Social support | Health systems issues/referrals | ||||||
Hh3 Male, with SWK, 21 months old & unknown birth weight. | Approx. 3 months pre, 2 weeks admission, 4 months post. | About 8 months: Child occasionally gets convulsions, but the cause not clearly understood. | Health centre-Health centre-Private clinic-Private clinic-(both retirees living in the village) -Public dispensary-duka Supp Public Dispensary-Private clinic-illness continues (child still not well), duka, Public dispensary, Private clinic. | Believed uvula was causing vomiting, diarrhoea and loss of appetite. Symptoms persisted after it was traditionally cut. Afterwards, diviner diagnosed possession by some evil spirits. Later, suspecting kwashiorkor, neighbours advised mother to seek care from local health facility. | Used to walk long distances to seek care, so as to reduce costs. Missed meals or reduced intake to help cover expenses for the child during treatment seeking. Siblings stopped schooling during the child’s admission. Post Could not sustain providing nourishing food as prescribed at discharge. | Received support from relatives, neighbours and friends in different forms: advice, loans or foodstuff. Neighbours convinced the child’s father to accept biomedical care and send funds for the same. | Took long to diagnose the problem despite several visits to local health practitioners and health facilities. Some levels of mistrust (local hws) regarding post treatment therapy. Couldn’t access care when needed during a health worker strike. Sometimes had to self-medicate due to regular drug stock-outs at local facility. | Had initially been referred to a different subcounty hospital. But chose to go to KCH as was unfamiliar with that facility and town in which it is located. | Ensure child fed on nutritious food: fruits, high protein content foods-eggs, milk though couldn’t sustain. Also, asked to observe and maintain hygiene around the child- limited water sources around her area. |
Description of Household data
| PID | Mum | Child Age (Months) | Index child sick since birth? | Other illnesses/ diagnoses | Mum Marital status | Mum Education | HH structure & Size | Social disruptions before admission | Level/source of income | If slept hungry |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | 25 (1) | 3 | Yes | Gastroenteritis | Married | Primary | Extended (7) | Y | Husband- Waiter Grandfather- Watchman | N |
| | 21 (1) | 8 | No | None | Single | Secondary | Extended (3) | N | Brother-casual | N |
| | 28 (1) | 16 | No | Gastroenteritis | Single | Secondary | Extended (12) | Y- child relocated to rural, change carer | Self-Runs cafe | Y |
| | 30 (3) | 20 | No | Fever of unknown origin | Married | Primary | Nuclear (6) | N | Husband- Banker Self-Business | N |
| | 19 (1) | 11 | No | Gastroenteritis | Married | Primary | Nuclear (3) | N- IDI said stopped working | Husband-construction | N |
| | 23 (1) | 14 | No | Sickle Cell Disease | Married | College | Extended (8) | Y- Mother sick | Husband-casual | N |
| | 23 (1) | 23 | Yes | Epilepsy | Single | Primary | Extended (11) | Y- Mother new job | Self-casual | N |
| | 38 (3) | 6 | No | LRTI | Single | Primary | Extended (7) | N | Self-fishmonger | Y |
| | 20 (3) | 15 | No | Meningitis | Married | Primary | Extended (11) | N | Grandfather-employed | N |
| | 29 (6) | 18 | No | Malaria | Married | None | Extended (9) | Y- Death of sibling | Husband- Watchman | Y |
| | 25 (1) | 14 | Yes | LRTI | Married | College | Nuclear (3) | Y- Mother stopped working | Husband-Casual | N |
| | 20 (2) | 24 | Yes | Gastroenteritis | Married | Primary | Extended (7) | Y- Birth of sibling | Husband & brother- watchmen | Y |
| | 20 (4) | 21 | No | Sepsis | Married | None | Extended (9) | N | Husband-Palmwine tapper | N |
| | 36 (9) | 18 | No | None | Single | None | Extended (10) | Y- Pregnancy & child relocated | Self-sell charcoal Grandmother- sells palmwine | Y |
| | 32 (3) | 8 | No | None | Single | Secondary | Extended (12) | N | Self-salonist | N |
| | 21 (1) | 15 | No | None | Separated | Primary | Extended (9) | Y-Mother & child relocated | Bro & inlaw-Masonry& casual | Y |
| | 19 (2) | 21 | No | None | Widow | Primary | Extended (11) | Y- Caregiver changed | Father & bro- Masonry | N |
| | 19 (3) | 24 | No | None | Married | Primary | Extended (10) | Y- Mother & child relocated | Husband-fisherman | N |
| | 21 (3) | 15 | Yes | Gastroenteritis | Separated | Primary | Extended (5) | Y- Parents separates & relocated | Self- Casual | Y |
| | 29 (4) | 13 | No | Cellulitis | Married | None | Extended (10) | Y- Mother relocated | Self-casual jobs | Y |
Fig. 2Care-seeking pathways for Children with Severe Wasting or Kwashiorkor
Care-seeking pathways for Children with Moderate Wasting OR No Wasting. Source of icons https://www.flaticon.com/
Situational Vulnerabilities and indicators of agency revealed through parent initiatives
| Vulnerabilities of children to (re) hospitalisation or death | Indications of agency in an effort to help the child recover | |
|---|---|---|
| Within the household and in the wider community | - Main carers’ and others’ poor physical and mental health and well-being - Anxieties about the health and well-being of the child - Family members living in households split geographically: access to main income earners difficult - Changes in living arrangements with negative implications for the child e.g. birth of a younger sibling leads to cessation of breast-feeding - Main carers often do not have decision-making power over household resources and treatment-seeking actions. Delays in seeking care can result from advice or demands of important decision-makers, including husbands and the parents (in-law), especially grandmothers - Some main carers face psychological or physical abuse from other household members - Lack of rapid access to funds and competing demands for those funds: Having to skip meals; cannot provide/sustain recommended foods; Low income restricts amount can borrow and get on credit - Finances required to travel to facilities, or to pay for facilities not available, or accessible to main carer: can delay treatment-seeking action, and those actions can further impact on income level or ability to earn - Perception of disease severity or cause leads to delays: Symptoms perceived as normal for prolonged periods, or to require treatment from healers | Observed in the many treatment-seeking actions taken by mothers, and their determination to do the best they can in their circumstances: - Visiting many facilities - Shifting, repeating and mixing sources of care as seen necessary and appropriate - Accessing care on credit - Seeking out and acting on advice on where to seek help for the child - Negotiating to secure funds or loans from husbands, others family members and neighbours - Working with for e.g. mothers-in-law and neighbours to convince the husband of the need for money or for a treatment-seeking action - Negotiating for delays in paying rent or pulling other children out of school to save money - Seeking and giving practical, emotional and advisory support from other parents - Avoiding certain facilities as perceived to offer poor quality - Reorganising living arrangements such as moving child to live in another home - Rethinking foods giving, feeding arrangements and hygiene practices in the home - Seeking extra and cancelling work as needed or possible to help meet treatment-seeking needs - Demanding information and support from health providers, cleaners, security guards and others in health facilities |
| Interactions with health facilities and other similar institutions | - Emotional and practical concerns about the child, quality of care, costs and needs of others - Being treated with disrespect can lead to fear to ask questions or share necessarily information with staff - Parents unable to demand more attention for their children, and lack of trust in care and advice given - Lack of familiarity with, cost or distance from desired health care services leads to delay in access - Perceived poor quality of care – either technical or inter-personal - Cost burdens adding to family concerns, and – where incurred – to low availability of funds in households (e.g. transport costs, consultation and treatment costs, nappies and admission costs in hospitals - Referral and continuity of care - recommended therapeutic feeds not available in facilities and being given conflicting advice; little mention of health care workers or community-based support |