The Quality of Tuberculosis Care in Urban Migrant Clinics in China

Large and increasing numbers of rural-to-urban migrants provided new challenges for tuberculosis control in large cities in China and increased the need for high quality tuberculosis care delivered by clinics in urban migrant communities. Based on a household survey in migrant communities, we select...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2018-09, Vol.15 (9), p.2037
Hauptverfasser: Xue, Hao, Hager, Jennifer, An, Qi, Liu, Kai, Zhang, Jing, Auden, Emma, Yang, Bingyan, Yang, Jie, Liu, Hongyan, Nie, Jingchun, Wang, Aiqin, Zhou, Chengchao, Shi, Yaojiang, Sylvia, Sean
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 2037
container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Xue, Hao
Hager, Jennifer
An, Qi
Liu, Kai
Zhang, Jing
Auden, Emma
Yang, Bingyan
Yang, Jie
Liu, Hongyan
Nie, Jingchun
Wang, Aiqin
Zhou, Chengchao
Shi, Yaojiang
Sylvia, Sean
description Large and increasing numbers of rural-to-urban migrants provided new challenges for tuberculosis control in large cities in China and increased the need for high quality tuberculosis care delivered by clinics in urban migrant communities. Based on a household survey in migrant communities, we selected and separated clinics into those that mainly serve migrants and those that mainly serve local residents. Using standardized patients, this study provided an objective comparison of the quality of tuberculosis care delivered by both types of clinics and examined factors related to quality care. Only 27% (95% confidence interval (CI) 14⁻46) of cases were correctly managed in migrant clinics, which is significantly worse than it in local clinics (50%, 95% CI 28⁻72). Clinicians with a base salary were 41 percentage points more likely to demonstrate better case management. Furthermore, clinicians with upper secondary or higher education level charged 20 RMB lower out of pocket fees than less-educated clinicians. In conclusion, the quality of tuberculosis care accessed by migrants was very poor and policies to improve the quality should be prioritized in current health reforms. Providing a base salary was a possible way to improve quality of care and increasing the education attainment of urban community clinicians might reduce the heavy barrier of medical expenses for migrants.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph15092037
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Based on a household survey in migrant communities, we selected and separated clinics into those that mainly serve migrants and those that mainly serve local residents. Using standardized patients, this study provided an objective comparison of the quality of tuberculosis care delivered by both types of clinics and examined factors related to quality care. Only 27% (95% confidence interval (CI) 14⁻46) of cases were correctly managed in migrant clinics, which is significantly worse than it in local clinics (50%, 95% CI 28⁻72). Clinicians with a base salary were 41 percentage points more likely to demonstrate better case management. Furthermore, clinicians with upper secondary or higher education level charged 20 RMB lower out of pocket fees than less-educated clinicians. In conclusion, the quality of tuberculosis care accessed by migrants was very poor and policies to improve the quality should be prioritized in current health reforms. 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subjects Adult
Advantages
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Ambulatory Care Facilities - statistics & numerical data
Antibiotics
China
Cities
Clinical medicine
Communities
Confidence intervals
Education
Family planning
Female
Global health
Health care policy
Humans
Male
Medical diagnosis
Middle Aged
Migrants
Patient satisfaction
Primary care
Public health
Quality
Quality of Health Care - statistics & numerical data
Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
Studies
Systematic review
Transients and Migrants - statistics & numerical data
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis - therapy
Urban areas
Urban Population - statistics & numerical data
title The Quality of Tuberculosis Care in Urban Migrant Clinics in China
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