Perceptions of quality of care for serious illness at different levels of facilities in a rural area of Bangladesh

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dc.contributor.authorAnwar, Iqbal-
dc.date.accessioned2011-08-10T02:19:19Z-
dc.date.available2011-08-10T02:19:19Z-
dc.date.issued2009-06-
dc.identifier.citationJ Health Popul Nutr 2009 Jun;27(3):396-405en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3011-
dc.description.abstractThis study was conducted to explore care-seeking for perceived serious morbidities and users' perceptions about quality of care at different facilities in Matlab, Bangladesh. This is a secondary analysis of baseline community survey data of the Matlab Essential Obstetric Care Project conducted in 2001. Principal component and factor analysis methods were used for computing summary quality and socioeconomic indicators. During perceived serious morbidity of any household member within the last one year, 88.1% (776/881) used health resource outside home. Of them, 25.6% visited informal care providers, 17.8% peripheral public facilities, 7.9% tertiary hospitals, 7.3% facilities of non-governmental organizations, and 41.4% private facilities as the highest healthcare resources. Socioeconomic status and type of morbidity were significant predictors for choice of the highest level of care. Most (86.1%) of those who sought care outside the home were satisfied with the quality of services provided for their last serious morbidities. Users of organized private-sector and tertiary facilities perceived the quality of services better than users of informal care providers and peripheral public facilities. Behaviour and attitude of the service providers and availability of medicines were significant predictors for perceived quality of care. Peripheral public-health facilities were of poor quality and grossly under-used. Further research should explore the technical aspect of quality of care in different facilities, along with perceptions of service providers to design client-focused interventions to impact the use of healthcare services. There is no reason to overlook informal care providers, they should rather be trained and monitoreden
dc.format.extent342920 bytes-
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoenen
dc.subjectHealth Behavioren
dc.subjectAge Distributionen
dc.subjectCommunity Health Servicesen
dc.subjectQuality of Health Careen
dc.subjectRural Populationen
dc.subjectSeverity of Illness Indexen
dc.subjectSocioeconomic Factorsen
dc.subjectYoung Adulten
dc.subjectAcute Diseaseen
dc.titlePerceptions of quality of care for serious illness at different levels of facilities in a rural area of Bangladeshen
dc.typeArticleen
Appears in Collections:Population sciences research papers

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