Abstract

BackgroundPrimary healthcare (PHC) is an essential component of an effective healthcare system. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s (KSA) health reforms prioritize tackling the increasing noncommunicable disease burden by prioritizing PHC, centering it as the core of the newly proposed Model of Care. To identify challenges and opportunities to scale up PHC capacity, understanding the current capacity of primary health care centers (PHCC) is critical. A limited number of publications review PHC capacity in KSA, focusing on specific regions/sectors; this paper is a first to examine PHC capacity on a national level.MethodsThe study uses a countrywide Facility Survey that collected data in 2018 from 2319 PHCCs, generating information on their characteristics, number of health workers, services provided, and capacity elements captured through the Service Availability and Drug Availability constructed indices. Descriptive analysis was performed by rural-urban classification. Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regressions were used to understand correlates to health workers and equipment availability. Finally, a logistic regression was fitted for selected services. Regressions controlled for various measures to determine correlates with facilities’ capacity.ResultsOn a national level, there are 0.74 PHCCs per 10,000 population in KSA. There are variations in the distribution of PHCCs across regions and within regions across rural and urban areas. PHCCs in urban areas have more examination rooms but lower examination room densities. Offering 24 × 7 services in PHCCs is infrequent and dependency on paper-based medical recording remains common. More urban regions are more likely to offer general services but less likely to offer burn management and emergency services. PHCCs are mostly staffed with general medicine, family medicine, and obstetrics & gynecology physicians, whose numbers are more concentrated in urban areas; however, their densities are higher in rural areas. Finally, psychiatrists and nutritionists are rare to find in PHCCs.ConclusionsDecision-makers need to consider several factors when designing PHC policies. For instance, PHC accreditation needs to be prioritized given its positive correlation with service provision and health workers availability. PHC 24 × 7 operation also needs considerations in rural areas due to the high dependency on PHCCs. Finally, there is a substantial need for improvements in e-health.

Highlights

  • Primary healthcare (PHC) is an essential component of an effective healthcare system

  • The objective of this study is to fill this gap, assessing the distribution of primary health care centers (PHCC) across the Kingdom and their infrastructures, available workforce, medication, and type of services provided to aid in determining the pathway and focus of future policies and initiatives for enhancing primary healthcare in Saudi Arabia

  • The results show that, compared to urban areas, rural areas have more facilities (56%) in Saudi Arabia

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Summary

Introduction

Primary healthcare (PHC) is an essential component of an effective healthcare system. From the AlmaAta declaration of 1978, on which most of the principles underpinning primary healthcare rests, to the Astana Declaration of 2018, unanimously endorsed by all WHO Member states, significant emphasis is placed on the importance of primary healthcare In both declarations, primary healthcare is an essential component of promoting health and health outcomes and is seen as a foundation of an effective and responsive healthcare system [2]. The UK is not the only case; many other countries like India, China, and Australia are sustaining the same hardships [6, 7] This limitation in rural areas across countries is multidimensional problem that include availability and distribution of the centers, their infrastructure, health workers, services provided and medications [8, 9]

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