Abstract
BackgroundIn Brazil, leprosy has been listed among the health priorities since 2006, in a plan known as the “Pact for life” (Pacto pela Vida). It is the sole country on the American continent that has not reached the global goal of disease elimination. Local health systems face many challenges to achieve this global goal. The study aimed to investigate how patients perceive the local health system's performance to eliminate leprosy and whether these perceptions differ in terms of the patients' income.Methodology/Principal FindingsA cross-sectional study was conducted in Londrina, State of Paraná, Brazil. Interviews were performed with the leprosy patients. The local health system was assessed through a structured and adapted tool, considering the domains judged as good quality of health care. The authors used univariate, bivariate and multivariate analyses. One hundred and nineteen patients were recruited for the study, 50.4% (60) of them were male, 54.0% (64) were between 42 and 65 years old and 66.3% (79) had finished elementary school. The results showed that patients used the Primary Health Care service near their place of residence but did not receive the leprosy diagnosis there. Important advances of this health system were verified for the elimination of leprosy, verifying protocols for good care delivery to the leprosy patients, but these services did not develop collective health actions and did not engage the patients' family members and community.Conclusions/SignificanceThe patients' difficulty was observed to have access to the diagnosis and treatment at health services near their homes. Leprosy care is provided at the specialized level, where the patients strongly bond with the teams. The care process is individual, with limited perspectives of integration among the health services for the purpose of case management and social mobilization of the community to the leprosy problem.
Highlights
Iniquity in access to health services has been discussed among health authorities in developing countries, especially regarding poverty and neglected diseases, such as leprosy [1]
In Brazil, the prevalence of this disease has progressively declined; this is the only country on the American continent that has not reached the global goal of disease elimination, with a detection rate of approximately 17.2 per 100,000 inhabitants [2]
Local health systems face many challenges to achieve the global goal of leprosy elimination though
Summary
Iniquity in access to health services has been discussed among health authorities in developing countries, especially regarding poverty and neglected diseases, such as leprosy [1]. Leprosy has been listed among the health priorities since 2006, in a plan known as the ‘‘Pact for life’’ (Pacto pela Vida) [3]. Local health systems face many challenges to achieve the global goal of leprosy elimination though. In Brazil, leprosy has been listed among the health priorities since 2006, in a plan known as the ‘‘Pact for life’’ (Pacto pela Vida). It is the sole country on the American continent that has not reached the global goal of disease elimination. Local health systems face many challenges to achieve this global goal. The study aimed to investigate how patients perceive the local health system’s performance to eliminate leprosy and whether these perceptions differ in terms of the patients’ income
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