Does contracting of health care in Afghanistan work? Public and service-users' perceptions and experience
Autor: | Noor Md Ansari, Neil Andersson, Anne Cockcroft, Amir Nawaz Khan, Candyce Hamel, Khalid Omer |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty media_common.quotation_subject Health informatics Health administration Nursing Perception Health care Confidence Intervals Odds Ratio Medicine Humans Social Change media_common Government Medical Audit Organizations business.industry lcsh:Public aspects of medicine Nursing research Public health Health Policy Afghanistan lcsh:RA1-1270 Public relations Consumer Behavior Contract Services Focus Groups Health Services Work (electrical) Health Care Surveys Multivariate Analysis Female Crime business Delivery of Health Care Research Article |
Zdroj: | BMC Health Services Research BMC Health Services Research, Vol 11, Iss Suppl 2, p S11 (2011) |
ISSN: | 1472-6963 |
Popis: | Background In rebuilding devastated health services, the government of Afghanistan has provided access to basic services mainly by contracting with non-government organisations (NGOs), and more recently the Strengthening Mechanism (SM) of contracting with Provincial Health Offices. Community-based information about the public's views and experience of health services is scarce. Methods Field teams visited households in a stratified random sample of 30 communities in two districts in Kabul province, with health services mainly provided either by an NGO or through the SM and administered a questionnaire about household views, use, and experience of health services, including payments for services and corruption. They later discussed the findings with separate community focus groups of men and women. We calculated weighted frequencies of views and experience of services and multivariate analysis examined the related factors. Results The survey covered 3283 households including 2845 recent health service users. Some 42% of households in the SM district and 57% in the NGO district rated available health services as good. Some 63% of households in the SM district (adjacent to Kabul) and 93% in the NGO district ordinarily used government health facilities. Service users rated private facilities more positively than government facilities. Government service users were more satisfied in urban facilities, if the household head was not educated, if they had enough food in the last week, and if they waited less than 30 minutes. Many households were unwilling to comment on corruption in health services; 15% in the SM district and 26% in the NGO district reported having been asked for an unofficial payment. Despite a policy of free services, one in seven users paid for treatment in government facilities, and three in four paid for medicine outside the facilities. Focus groups confirmed people knew payments were unofficial; they were afraid to talk about corruption. Conclusions Households used government health services but preferred private services. The experience of service users was similar in the SM and NGO districts. People made unofficial payments in government facilities, whether SM or NGO run. Tackling corruption in health services is an important part of anti-corruption measures in Afghanistan. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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