| Literature DB >> 33150138 |
Jingru Tan1, Hanzhang Xu2,3, Qiping Fan4, Olivia Neely5, Rinchen Doma5, Rishika Gundi5, Binjwala Shrestha6, Abha Shrestha7, Shrinkhala Shrestha8, Biraj Karmacharya8, Wanbing Gu1,9, Truls Østbye5, Lijing L Yan1,5.
Abstract
Background: Hypertension and related complications are major contributors to morbidity and mortality in Nepal. Community health workers have been proposed as promising health cadres to meet the growing healthcare demand for non-communicable disease management in other developing countries. Objective: We aimed to explore existing workflows, needs and challenges for hypertension care coordination and to assess the feasibility of establishing a Female Community Health Volunteer (FCHV)-based hypertension management program in Kavre, Nepal. Design: We conducted one focus group discussion with eight FCHVs and twenty-three in-depth interviews with four FCHVs not attending FGD, nine individuals with hypertension, six health workers, and four health officials in two village development committees of Kavre District, Nepal. Applied thematic analysis was performed using NVivo 12.Entities:
Keywords: Nepal; community health workers; female community health volunteers; hypertension management; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33150138 PMCID: PMC7583706 DOI: 10.5334/gh.872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Heart ISSN: 2211-8160
Characteristics of two study sites.
Interview Contents for Each Group of Interviewees.
| Interviewee category | Interview guide focus |
|---|---|
Disease history Knowledge of hypertension Hypertension treatment and non-pharmaceutical management Treatment adherence Challenges of disease management | |
Current responsibility and role Knowledge and experiences about hypertension management Attitudes towards participating in hypertension management Perceived challenges and solutions | |
Available hypertension services in the local community Community awareness of hypertension Interaction with FCHVs Perception of FCHV mobilization Suggestion for FCHV mobilization | |
Demographic Characteristics of all Interviewees.
| Characteristics (Mean ± SD or %) | Individuals with Hypertension (n = 9) | FCHVs (n = 12) | Health Workers (n = 6) | Health Officials(n = 4) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 64.4 ± 13.3 | 47.6 ± 8.9 | – | – | |
| 66.7 | 100.0 | 16.7 | 0 | |
| 66.7 | ||||
| 6.4 ± 4.4 | – | |||
| – | 20.3 ± 8.7 | – | – | |
| illiterate | 66.7 | 41.7 | – | – |
| Primary school | 22.2 | 41.7 | – | – |
| Secondary school | 0 | 16.6 | – | – |
| Higher | 11.1 | 0 | – | – |
| 4 farmers | – | 1 nursing midwife | 1 ward executive | |
Hypertension awareness and treatment.
| Key themes | Major findings |
|---|---|
Most individuals with hypertension could link hypertension to its causes, symptoms and complications. Misconceptions and home remedies were prevalent among individuals with hypertension. | |
There was a delay in treatment initiation. Negligence, distance to health institutions and fear of lifelong medication-taking were main barriers to treatment initiation. | |
Overall, individuals with hypertension adhered to medication once they started it Some individuals with hypertension occasionally stopped medication due to forgetfulness, negligence, laziness, and affordability issues | |
Loss to follow-up was common among individuals with hypertension | |
Individuals with hypertension complained it was hard to regulate their lifestyle Family support was an important part of regulating a healthy lifestyle. | |
Health system-related barriers and facilitators of hypertension care utilization.
| Key themes | Major findings |
|---|---|
Underutilization of primary healthcare institutions, communication gap and lack of grass-roots level educational campaigns were main challenges. | |
Community pharmacies and health camps increase hypertension care accessibility Recent NCDs-related actions were favorable for hypertension management improvement. | |
Feasibility of FCHV mobilization.
| Key themes | Major findings |
|---|---|
FCHVs’ responsibility had been expanding to lifestyle education and counselling gradually All stakeholders had a positive attitude to FCHV mobilization | |
Systematic training, appropriate incentives and adequate access to equipment and medical resource were prerequisites of effective FCHV mobilization | |