AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study evaluated how well primary care meets the needs of patients with mental illness, focusing on non-medical aspects of care as defined by the World Health Organization.
  • - Out of 426 patients surveyed, 77.4% rated the responsiveness of the health system as good, particularly valuing dignity, confidentiality, and communication, while prompt attention was highlighted as a critical area needing improvement.
  • - Factors such as low income and low education levels were linked to higher chances of poor confidentiality responsiveness, indicating that organizational changes are necessary to improve care in urban settings, especially regarding waiting times.

Article Abstract

Background: The health system responsiveness is a concept developed by the World Health Organization that measures patients' expectations for the non-medical care they receive. The aim of this study is to assess primary care responsiveness as seen by people with mental illness and to analyse the factors associated with poor responsiveness.

Methods: Cross-sectional descriptive study on 426 people with mental illness who had attended primary care consultations at least once in the previous 12 months. The responsiveness of the health system was determined through the short questionnaire "Multi-country Survey Study on Health and Health Systems Responsiveness". Differences in responsiveness by sociodemographic characteristics were compared through the Chi-squared test. Logistic regression identified the factors associated with poor responsiveness.

Results: Overall responsiveness was measured as good by 77.4% of patients, being this probability higher in the domains: dignity, confidentiality, and communication. The most valued domains by people with mental illness were prompt attention (42.4%), dignity (30.1%), and communication (17%). Only prompt attention scored high importance and poor responsiveness. In patients with an income lower than 900 euros per month and low level of studies, the probability of poor confidentiality responsiveness was multiplied by 3 and 2.7 respectively.

Conclusions: People with mental illness perceive good responsiveness from primary care in terms of dignity, confidentiality, and communication. Prompt attention, as the domain of greatest importance and worst valuation, should be prioritised through the implementation of organisational measures in health centres to reduce waiting times, especially in urban areas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8805273PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-07516-2DOI Listing

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