Abstract

BackgroundThe private health sector is a primary source of curative care for childhood illnesses in many low- and middle-income countries. Therefore ensuring appropriate private sector care is an important step towards improving outcomes from illnesses like pneumonia, which is the leading infectious cause of childhood mortality worldwide. This study aimed to provide evidence on private sector care for childhood pneumonia in Uttar Pradesh, India, by simultaneously exploring providers’ knowledge and practices and caregivers’ experiences.MethodsWe conducted in-depth interviews with a purposive sample of 36 practitioners and 34 caregivers in two districts. Practitioners included allopathic doctors, AYUSH providers, and drug sellers. Caregivers were mothers of children under the age of five with symptoms consistent with pneumonia who had seen one of those practitioners. Interview transcripts were analyzed thematically.ResultsCaregivers were generally prompt in seeking care outside the home, but many initially favored local informal providers based on access and cost. Drug sellers were not commonly consulted for treatment. Formal providers had imperfect, but reasonable, knowledge of pneumonia and followed appropriate steps for diagnosis, though some gaps were noticed that were primarily related to lack of (or failure to use) diagnostic tools. Most practitioners prescribed antibiotics and supportive symptomatic treatment. Relational and structural factors encouraged overuse of antibiotics and treatment interruption. Caregivers often had a limited understanding of treatment but wanted rapid symptomatic improvements, frequently leading to sequentially consulting multiple providers and interrupting treatment when symptoms improved. Providers were confronted with these expectations and care-seeking patterns.ConclusionsThis study contributes in-depth evidence on private sector care for childhood pneumonia in UP. Achieving appropriate care requires an enriched perspective that simultaneously considers the critical role of provider-caregiver interactions and of the context in which they occur in shaping treatment outcomes.

Highlights

  • The private health sector is a primary source of curative care for childhood illnesses in many low- and middle-income countries

  • Little evidence is available on private sector care for pneumonia among children in India

  • Identification of children with suspected pneumonia was based on a set of symptoms, including reports of 1) a history of cough or difficulty breathing and 2) fast breathing, as per the World Health Organization (WHO) Integrated Management of Childhood Illness clinical algorithm [32]

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Summary

Introduction

The private health sector is a primary source of curative care for childhood illnesses in many low- and middle-income countries. Ensuring appropriate private sector care is an important step towards improving outcomes from illnesses like pneumonia, which is the leading infectious cause of childhood mortality worldwide. This study aimed to provide evidence on private sector care for childhood pneumonia in Uttar Pradesh, India, by simultaneously exploring providers’ knowledge and practices and caregivers’ experiences. Many households in low- and middle-income countries seek curative care for childhood illnesses from formal and informal for-profit providers, in Asia [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17].

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