Patient satisfaction with task shifting of antiretroviral services in Ethiopia: implications for universal health coverage

Formalized task shifting structures have been used to rapidly scale up antiretroviral service delivery to underserved populations in several countries, and may be a promising mechanism for accomplishing universal health coverage. However, studies evaluating the quality of service delivery through ta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health policy and planning 2014-09, Vol.29 (suppl 2), p.ii50-ii58
Hauptverfasser: Asfaw, Elias, Dominis, Sarah, Palen, John G H, Wong, Wendy, Bekele, Abebe, Kebede, Amha, Johns, Benjamin
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container_end_page ii58
container_issue suppl 2
container_start_page ii50
container_title Health policy and planning
container_volume 29
creator Asfaw, Elias
Dominis, Sarah
Palen, John G H
Wong, Wendy
Bekele, Abebe
Kebede, Amha
Johns, Benjamin
description Formalized task shifting structures have been used to rapidly scale up antiretroviral service delivery to underserved populations in several countries, and may be a promising mechanism for accomplishing universal health coverage. However, studies evaluating the quality of service delivery through task shifting have largely ignored the patient perspective, focusing on health outcomes and acceptability to health care providers and regulatory bodies, despite studies worldwide that have shown the significance of patient satisfaction as an indicator of quality. This study aimed to measure patient satisfaction with task shifting of antiretroviral services in hospitals and health centres in four regions of Ethiopia. This cross-sectional study used data collected from a time-motion study of patient services paired with 665 patient exit interviews in a stratified random sample of antiretroviral therapy clinics in 21 hospitals and 40 health centres in 2012. Data were analyzed using f-tests across provider types, and multivariate logistic regression to identify determinants of patient satisfaction. Most (528 of 665) patients were satisfied or somewhat satisfied with the services received, but patients who received services from nurses and health officers were significantly more likely to report satisfaction than those who received services from doctors [odds ratio (OR) 0.26, P < 0.01]. Investments in the health facility were associated with higher satisfaction (OR 1.07, P < 0.01), while costs to patients of over 120 birr were associated with lower satisfaction (OR 0.14, P < 0.05). This study showed high levels of patient satisfaction with task shifting in Ethiopia. The evidence generated by this study complements previous biomédical and health care provider/regulatory acceptability studies to support the inclusion of task shifting as a mechanism for scaling-up health services to achieve universal health coverage, particularly for underserved areas facing severe health worker shortages.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/heapol/czu072
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford Journals Open Access Collection; MEDLINE; PAIS Index; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Anti-Retroviral Agents - therapeutic use
Antiretroviral drugs
Cross-Sectional Studies
Doctors
Drug therapy
Ethiopia
Female
Health care
Health facilities
Health Personnel
Health services utilization
HIV Infections - drug therapy
Humans
Male
Medical personnel
Medicine
Middle Aged
Original
Original articles
Patient Acceptance of Health Care - psychology
Patient Satisfaction
Patients
Quality of care
Regression analysis
Studies
Universal Coverage
Vulnerable Populations
title Patient satisfaction with task shifting of antiretroviral services in Ethiopia: implications for universal health coverage
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