Abstract
BackgroundBangladesh is one among the few countries of the world that provides free medical services at the community level through various public health facilities. It is now evident that, clients’ perceived quality of services and their expectations of service standards affect health service utilization to a great extent. The aim of the study was to develop and validate the measures for perception and satisfaction of primary health care quality in Bangladesh context and to identify their aspects on the utilization status of the Community Clinic services.MethodsThis mixed method cross sectional survey was conducted from January to June 2012, in the catchment area of 12 community clinics. Since most of the outcome indicators focus mainly on women and children, women having children less than 2 years of age were randomly assigned and interviewed for the study purpose. Data were collected through FGD, Key informants interview and a pretested semi- structured questionnaire.ResultsAbout 95 % of the respondents were Muslims and 5 % were Hindus. The average age of the respondents was 23.38 (SD 4.15) and almost all of them are home makers. The average monthly expenditure of their family was 95US $ (SD 32US$). At the beginning of the study, two psychometric research instruments; 24 items perceived quality of primary care services PQPCS scale (chronbach’s α = .89) and 22 items community clinic service satisfaction CCSS scale (chronbach’s α = .97), were constructed and validated. This study showed less educated, poor, landless mothers utilized the community clinic services more than their educated and wealthier counterpart. Women who lived in their own residence used the community clinic services more frequently than those who lived in a rental house. Perceptions concerning skill and competence of the health care provider and satisfaction indicating interpersonal communication and attitude of the care provider were important predictors for community clinic service utilization. Perception related to the quality of management, administration, physical environment of the service point and satisfaction addressing health promotion and women health issues played significant role on community clinic’s services utilization.ConclusionsBesides parental education and income, client’s perception and satisfaction played significant role in community clinic service utilization. Provider’s perception of service quality should be studied. The study findings will enable policy-makers to improve quality of primary health care services, realizing providers’ and patients’ ideas of community clinic service quality.
Highlights
Bangladesh is one among the few countries of the world that provides free medical services at the community level through various public health facilities
This study showed less educated, poor, landless mothers utilized the community clinic services more than their educated and wealthier counterpart
Women who lived in their own residence used the community clinic services more frequently than those who lived in a rental house
Summary
Bangladesh is one among the few countries of the world that provides free medical services at the community level through various public health facilities. Community Clinics (CC) were to provide services for around 6000 people, and it was envisaged that their location would make them accessible for 80 % of the population within less than 30 min walking distance [2]. These Community Clinics were to bring family planning, preventive health services and limited curative services closer to the population, and to improve the efficiency of service provision, partly by replacing outreach services with services provided from a fixed point. Experiences in Bangladesh [7] and in China [8], Nepal [9] and other countries provide growing evidence that the perceived quality of health care service has a strong impact on their utilization status. The low utilization of both community health workers and first line health services is, to a large extent, due to consumers’ dissatisfaction and perceptions of low quality of care [10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]
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