AI Article Synopsis

  • Evidence from Ghana shows that non-pharmaceutical interventions like lockdowns during COVID-19 led to a significant decrease in the use of essential health services, prompting an investigation into challenges and strategies that emerged during this period.
  • The study involved 34 participants, including healthcare providers and policy-makers, who highlighted that disruptions affected vital services such as maternal and child health, as well as treatment for various diseases, primarily due to barriers like fear, inadequate care quality, and financial constraints.
  • To address these disruptions, a range of interventions were implemented at different levels, including community outreach, training health workers, and introducing policy changes, which collectively helped maintain essential health services throughout the pandemic in Ghana.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Evidence suggests that non-pharmaceutical interventions such as lockdown policies, restriction of movement and physical distancing to control the novel COVID-19 contributed to the decline in utilisation of essential health services. We explored healthcare providers' and policy-makers' experiences of the barriers, interventions and response actions that contributed to ensuring the continuity of essential health services during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ghana to help inform future practice and policy.

Methods: We used a qualitative study approach. Data were analysed using thematic analysis. Thirty Four participants composed of 20 healthcare providers and 14 policy-makers who worked across regions with low and high recorded COVID-19 cases in Ghana during the COVID-19 pandemic were involved in this study.

Results: Participants reported that essential health services including maternal, reproductive and child health services, communicable and non-communicable disease care, and elective surgeries were disrupted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Barriers to the utilisation of essential services were constructed into three subthemes: (1) fear, (2) poor quality of care at the facility and (3) financial limitation. These barriers were mitigated with population-based interventions underpinned by the socioecological model at the individual and interpersonal level (including psychosocial care for families and home visits), institutional and community levels (such as allocation of funds, training of health workers, public education, triage stations, provision of logistics, appointment scheduling, telemedicine and redeployment of health workers) and public policy level (tax relief packages, transportation arrangements and provision of incentives), which helped in maintaining essential health services during COVID-19.

Conclusion: Disruption of essential health services during COVID-19 in Ghana instigated population-based interventions which aided in expanding the populations' continuous access to essential health services and strengthened health service delivery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11148662PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2023-013284DOI Listing

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