Abstract

Limited access to Chagas disease diagnosis and treatment is a major obstacle to reaching the 2020 World Health Organization milestones of delivering care to all infected and ill patients. Colombia has been identified as a health system in transition, reporting one of the highest levels of health insurance coverage in Latin America. We explore if and how this high level of coverage extends to those with Chagas disease, a traditionally marginalised population. Using a mixed methods approach, we calculate coverage for screening, diagnosis and treatment of Chagas. We then identify supply-side constraints both quantitatively and qualitatively. A review of official registries of tests and treatments for Chagas disease delivered between 2008 and 2014 is compared to estimates of infected people. Using the Flagship Framework, we explore barriers limiting access to care. Screening coverage is estimated at 1.2% of the population at risk. Aetiological treatment with either benznidazol or nifurtimox covered 0.3–0.4% of the infected population. Barriers to accessing screening, diagnosis and treatment are identified for each of the Flagship Framework's five dimensions of interest: financing, payment, regulation, organization and persuasion. The main challenges identified were: a lack of clarity in terms of financial responsibilities in a segmented health system, claims of limited resources for undertaking activities particularly in primary care, non-inclusion of confirmatory test(s) in the basic package of diagnosis and care, poor logistics in the distribution and supply chain of medicines, and lack of awareness of medical personnel. Very low screening coverage emerges as a key obstacle hindering access to care for Chagas disease. Findings suggest serious shortcomings in this health system for Chagas disease, despite the success of universal health insurance scale-up in Colombia. Whether these shortcomings exist in relation to other neglected tropical diseases needs investigating. We identify opportunities for improvement that can inform additional planned health reforms.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPublic health interventions for Chagas disease in Latin America have focused on interruption of transmission by blood-bank screening and vector control (mainly through insecticide spraying, and in some cases by housing improvement, health education, and social changes such as migration and modernization) (World Health Organization, 2010)

  • Chagas disease is caused by infection with the parasite T. cruzi, which is usually transmitted by a triatomine insect vector

  • Increasing coverage and improving access to care for Chagas disease patients involves a complex network of many actors and institutions

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Summary

Introduction

Public health interventions for Chagas disease in Latin America have focused on interruption of transmission by blood-bank screening and vector control (mainly through insecticide spraying, and in some cases by housing improvement, health education, and social changes such as migration and modernization) (World Health Organization, 2010). These strategies have shown success in decreasing incidence and burden of disease over time (Hashimoto and Schofield, 2012; Schofield et al, 2006). Even if interruption of transmission were achievable, given the chronic course of the disease, people already infected need a responsive health system to meet their health care needs (Manne et al, 2012)

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