AI Article Synopsis

  • Access to primary healthcare for displaced populations in conflict zones is hindered by various challenges, including geographical, cultural, logistical, and security issues.
  • Different delivery models, such as health facility-based and community-based care, are utilized, yet there is limited evidence on their selection and implementation by organizations.
  • A systematic review revealed 48 research articles, with 33 rated as high quality, highlighting diverse models of care, services offered, and the roles of various healthcare workers in providing care to internally displaced persons and refugees.

Article Abstract

Background: In conflict-affected settings, access to primary healthcare for displaced populations is constrained by multiple challenges. These include geographical, cultural, communication, logistical and financial barriers, as well as risks posed to health workers and the population by insecurity. Different models of care are used to provide primary healthcare to affected communities. However, there is a paucity of evidence on how these models are selected and implemented by organisations working in conflict and displacement-affected settings. Our aim was to explore the different primary healthcare delivery models used in conflict-affected settings to understand gaps in existing healthcare delivery models.

Methods: We conducted a systematic review using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses guidelines. The review protocol was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews. We searched six databases for manuscripts published from January 1992 to December 2020. Publications were included if they reported primary healthcare models of care in conflict-affected settings of Africa. Data was analyzed descriptively and thematically using tables, charts and text.

Results: Forty-eight primary research articles were included for analysis from which thirty-three were rated as "high" quality. The results showed that the models of care in place in these conflict-affected settings include health facility-based, community-based, mobile clinics, outreach and home visits. Primary healthcare for internally displaced persons and refugees is provided by a wide range of actors including national and international organisations. A range of services is offered, most commonly nutrition, mental health and sexual/reproductive health. Some organisations offer vertical (stand-alone) services, while others use an integrated service delivery model. Multiple cadres of healthcare workers provide services, frequently lay healthcare workers such as Community Health Workers.

Conclusion: Understanding the different modalities of primary healthcare delivery in conflict-affected settings is important to identify existing practices and gaps in service delivery. Service delivery using community health workers in conflict-affected settings is a low-cost primary care delivery strategy that may help optimize contributions of existing personnel through task shifting.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10349495PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13031-023-00533-wDOI Listing

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