98%
921
2 minutes
20
Background: Most child deaths can be averted through prompt and appropriate treatment of child illnesses such as pneumonia, diarrhoea, and malaria. However, research has suggested that increases in care seeking do not necessarily mean that quality care is being received. We assessed the service readiness and process quality of curative healthcare during childhood and determined whether children are receiving health services with sufficient quality across countries.
Methods: We linked data from household surveys including the standard Demographic and Health Survey and the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey to data from facility surveys including the Service Provision Assessment and Health Facility Assessment in Bangladesh, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Nepal, Senegal and Tanzania to estimate the effective coverage of child illness treatment. We assessed the gaps in service availability and coverage, lack of service readiness, missed care opportunities, and inadequate service process, where service readiness and process quality were defined according to global standards with country-specific adaptations. We analysed the service readiness, quality of care, and effective coverage by individual illness and combined illnesses accounting for equity dimensions.
Results: Seven to 42% of children experienced at least one illness. An integrated management of child illnesses (IMCI) service was available in 58-85% of facilities. We found that 55-66% of health facilities in the countries were ready to deliver treatment to sick children. However, the readiness-adjusted contact suggested that child healthcare was mostly sought in facilities with low readiness score, ranging from 15% (Nepal) to 46.0% (Malawi). Health facilities had low diagnostics, supervision, and trained personnel capacity to manage child illnesses. Concerning the quality of care, only 51-60% of the procedures during clinical encounters were in line with standards. Counselling of caretakers had the lowest score, while treatment components had the highest process quality score. Hospitals had higher readiness and process quality scores compared to primary facilities and the private sector. There were, however, large gaps in service readiness and significant inadequate service processes in all countries; 35% (Haiti) to 79% (Bangladesh) of sick children sought care from a health facility, with only 7% (Nepal) to 29% (Malawi) of them actually receiving appropriate treatment. We found large inequalities in care seeking, quality of care, and effective coverage across levels of education and poverty, and places of residence.
Conclusions: A large proportion of facilities did not meet the required capacity to provide IMCI services. The provision of health services has major quality gaps, highlighting the need for strengthening health service access, capacity and quality of care to reach universal child health coverage.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11961055 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.15.04085 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
August 2025
Thoracic Surgery, Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Sendai, JPN.
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1) is an autosomal dominant disorder associated with vascular abnormalities, including spontaneous hemothorax and arterial aneurysms. We present a rare case of spontaneous hemothorax in which an apparently hemostatic sub-pleural hematoma began to bleed again after the patient was repositioned. A 47-year-old man with NF-1 presented with the sudden onset of left-sided chest pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpen Access J Contracept
September 2025
Coordinator for Centre for SET-SRHR Lira University, Lira, Uganda.
Background: Conventional top-down health interventions often exclude adolescents and community stakeholders from service design and implementation, resulting in low uptake and a mismatch with young people's needs. The CAFFP-PAC initiative in Northern Uganda sought to explore how a community-led, adolescent-centered inception process could support integration of adolescent-friendly family planning and post-abortion care into primary healthcare services.
Methods: A participatory qualitative design was employed during an inception meeting in Lira City on April 1, 2025, guided by principles of community-based participatory research and citizen science.
Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med
September 2025
Department of Optometry, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein.
Background: Social media has become a platform where unheard voices within different communities are shared with government.
Aim: The study explored and described expressed reactions of social media users regarding the implementation of the National Health Insurance (NHI) in South Africa.
Setting: This study was conducted online on existing social media platforms that share current news.
Reumatol Clin (Engl Ed)
September 2025
Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, Hospital Universitario "Dr. José E. González", Department of Pediatrics, Monterrey, Mexico. Electronic address:
Purpose: The aim of the present study was to translate and perform a transcultural adaptation and validation of the TRAQ into Mexican Spanish.
Methodology: Transversal and observational study. First, the TRAQ was translated and transculturally adapted into Mexican Spanish.
BMJ Open Qual
September 2025
Emergency Department, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.
Background: Current guidelines recommend that the door-to-wire (D2W) time should be <90 min in patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). This study evaluated the effect of a 24/7 on-site PCI team strategy on the D2W time.
Methods: In this single-centre, retrospective study, patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI within 1 year before (control group, n=143) and 1 year after (intervention group, n=96) implementing a 24/7 on-site PCI team strategy were enrolled.