AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines access to health services for HIV, TB, and malaria in Ekiti State, focusing on availability, affordability, and acceptability of services.
  • A cross-sectional analysis of 177 Primary Health Centres revealed that while nearly 50% had condoms available, only 26.6% were prepared for TB services, and a significant urban-rural disparity in readiness for HIV and TB services was noted.
  • The conclusion highlights poor readiness for HIV and TB services, with a call for the Ekiti State government to enhance investments in health centres by improving diagnostics, supply of medicines, and staff training.

Article Abstract

Introduction: access to services encompasses three components: availability, affordability, and acceptability. The physical presence of service delivery, which includes health infrastructure, core health staff, and aspects of service use, is referred to as service availability. This study was conducted to inform the health service availability and preparedness to deliver HIV, TB, and malaria prevention and control services in Ekiti State.

Methods: this is a descriptive cross-sectional study conducted among all the Primary Health Centres (177) in Ekiti State Nigeria between August and October 2020. Data were collected with the use of the World Health Organization Service Availability and Readiness Assessment tool and were analyzed using STATA SE 12.

Results: close to half (49%) of them had a condom in supply. More than 90% of them provided diagnosis and treatment of malaria. The HIV-specific service readiness index was approximately 40/0%. Only 26.6% of health facilities were ready to offer TB prevention and control services. Malaria specific service readiness index was 61.9%. There was a statistically significant difference in the HIV and TB-specific service readiness of facilities in the urban compared to rural locations. Health facilities located in the urban areas had higher mean readiness scores compared to those in the other residential areas (P=0.014).

Conclusion: it is evident that HIV and TB-specific service readiness is very poor among PHCs in Ekiti State. Malaria Service Readiness was fair. Ekiti State government needs to expand investments in PHCs by strengthening the diagnostic services, commodities and medicine supply, adequate equipment and staff training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9860086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2022.43.116.35883DOI Listing

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