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Experiences of seeking healthcare across the border: lessons to inform upstream policies and system developments on cross-border health in East Africa

Freddie Ssengooba, Doreen Tuhebwe, Steven Ssendagire, Susan Babirye, Martha Akulume, Aloysius Ssennyonjo, Arthur Rutaroh, Léon Mutesa, Mabel Nangami

2021BMJ Open10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study explored the experiences of accessing care across the border in East Africa. PARTICIPANTS: From February to June 2018, a cross-sectional study using qualitative and quantitative methods was conducted among 279 household adults residing along selected national border sites of Uganda, Kenya and Rwanda and had accessed care from the opposite side of the border 5 years prior to this study. SETTING: Access to HIV treatment, maternal delivery and childhood immunisation services was explored. We applied the health access framework and an appreciative inquiry approach to identify factors that enabled access to the services. MEASURES: Exploratory factor analysis and linear regression were used for quantitative data, while deductive content analysis was done for the qualitative data on respondent's experiences navigating health access barriers. RESULTS: The majority of respondents (83.9%; 234/279) had accessed care from public health facilities. Nearly one-third (77/279) had sought care across the border more than a year ago and 22.9% (64/279) less than a month ago. From the linear regression, the main predictor for ease of access for healthcare were ''ease of border crossing' (regression coefficient (RegCoef) 0.381); 'services being free' (RegCoef 0.478); 'services and medicines availability' (RegCoef 0.274) and 'acceptable quality of services' (RegCoef 0.364). The key facilitators for successful navigation of access barriers were related to the presence of informal routes, speaking a similar language and the ability to pay for the services. CONCLUSION: Communities resident near national borders were able to cross borders to seek healthcare. There is need for a policy environment to enable East Africa invest better and realise synergies for these communities. This will advance Universal Health Coverage goals for communities along the border who represent the far fang areas of the health system with multiple barriers to healthcare access.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHealth careRespondentHealth services researchPublic healthCross-sectional studyHealth policyQualitative researchQualitative propertyNursingEconomic growthPolitical scienceLawEconomicsMachine learningPathologySociologyComputer scienceSocial scienceGlobal Maternal and Child HealthGlobal Health and SurgeryMigration, Health and Trauma
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