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The know-do gap in quality of health for chronic non-communicable diseases in rural China. | LitMetric

The know-do gap in quality of health for chronic non-communicable diseases in rural China.

Front Public Health

Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Proper management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like diabetes and angina is a major challenge for rural health systems in China, with a study focusing on the "know-do gap" between healthcare providers' knowledge and their actual practices.
  • The research involved 306 healthcare providers from Village Clinics (VCs) and Township Health Centers (THCs) in rural Sichuan, investigating their abilities to diagnose and treat NCDs through clinical vignettes and standardized patient interactions.
  • Results showed that THC providers were generally more knowledgeable and performed better than VC providers; however, overall diagnosis rates were alarmingly low, revealing significant gaps in both understanding and treatment quality for these diseases.

Article Abstract

Proper management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is a severe challenge to China's rural health system. This study investigates what influences the poor medical treatment of NCDs (diabetes and angina) by evaluating the "know-do gap" between provider knowledge and practice. To determine whether low levels of provider knowledge low quality of patient care is the primary constraint on the quality of NCDs diagnosis and treatment in rural China. Providers from Village Clinics (VC) and Township Health Centers (THC), and Standardized Patients (SP) were selected by a multi-stage random sampling method. Clinical vignettes were administered to 306 providers from 103 VCs and 50 THCs in rural Sichuan Province. SPs presented diabetes symptoms completed 97 interactions with providers in 46 VCs and 51 THCs; SPs presented angina symptoms completed 100 interactions with providers in 50 VCs and 50 THCs. Process quality, diagnosis quality, and treatment quality were assessed against national standards for diabetes and angina. Two-tailed -tests and tests of proportions for continuous outcomes and tests of proportions for binary dependent variables were used to compare vignette and SP results. Differences between vignette and SP data calculated the know-do gap. Regression analyses were used to examine the providers/facility characteristics and knowledge/practice associations. THC providers demonstrated significantly more knowledge in vignettes and better practices in SP visits than VC providers. However, levels of knowledge were low overall: 48.2% of THC providers and 28.2% of VC providers properly diagnosed type 2 diabetes, while 23.8% of THC providers and 14.7% of VC providers properly diagnosed angina. With SPs, 2.1% of THC providers and 6.8% of VC providers correctly diagnosed type 2 diabetes; 25.5% of THC providers and 12.8% of VC providers correctly diagnosed angina. There were significant know-do gaps in diagnosis process quality, diagnosis quality, and treatment quality for diabetes ( < 0.01), and in diagnosis process quality ( < 0.05) and treatment quality for angina ( < 0.01). Providers in rural China display low levels of knowledge when treating diabetes and angina. Despite low knowledge, evidence of the know-do gap indicates that low-quality healthcare is the primary constraint on the quality of NCD diagnosis and treatment in rural China. Our research findings provide a new perspective for the evaluation of the medical quality and a technical basis for the development of new standardized cases in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9435052PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.953881DOI Listing

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