Artigo Revisado por pares

Health-care availability, preference, and distance for women in urban Bo, Sierra Leone

2016; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 61; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/s00038-016-0815-y

ISSN

1661-8564

Autores

Lila C. Fleming, Rashid Ansumana, Alfred S. Bockarie, Joel D. Alejandre, Karen Owen, Umaru Bangura, David Henry Jimmy, Kevin M. Curtin, David A. Stenger, Kathryn H. Jacobsen,

Tópico(s)

HIV/AIDS Impact and Responses

Resumo

To examine the diversity of the health-care providers in urban Bo, Sierra Leone, identify the types of health-care facilities preferred by women for fevers, and analyze the road network distances from homes to preferred health-care providers. A population-based random sampling method was used to recruit 2419 women from Bo. A geographic information system was used to measure the road distance from each woman’s home to her preferred provider. Preferred health-care providers for acute febrile illnesses (commonly referred to as “malaria” in the study communities) were hospitals (62.3 %), clinics (12.6 %), and pharmacies (12.4 %). Participants lived a median distance of 0.6 km from the nearest provider, but on average each woman lived 2.2 km one-way from her preferred provider. Women living farther from the city center had preferred providers significantly farther from home than women living downtown. The diverse health-care marketplace in Bo allows women to select clinical facilities from across the city. Most women prefer a malaria care provider farther from home than they could comfortably walk when ill.

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