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首页> 外文期刊>International journal for equity in health >NGO-provided free HIV treatment and services in Burkina Faso: scarcity, therapeutic rationality and unfair process
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NGO-provided free HIV treatment and services in Burkina Faso: scarcity, therapeutic rationality and unfair process

机译:非政府组织在布基纳法索提供的免费艾滋病毒治疗和服务:稀缺性,治疗合理性和不公平进程

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Until 2010, Burkina Faso was an exception to the international trend of abolishing user fees for antiretroviral treatment (ART). Patients were still expected to pay 1,500F CFA (2 Euros) per month for ART. Nevertheless, many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) exempted patients from payment. The objective of this study was to investigate how NGOs selected the beneficiaries of payment exemptions for government-provided ART and rationed out complementary medical and psychosocial services. For this qualitative study, we conducted 13 individual interviews and three focus group discussions (n = 13 persons) with program staff in nine NGOs (4,000 patients), two NGO coordinating structures and one national program. These encounters were recorded and transcribed, and their content was thematically analyzed. The results were presented to the NGOs for feedback. Results indicate that there are no concrete guidelines for identifying patients warranting payment exemptions. Formerly, ART was scarce in Burkina Faso and the primary criterion for treatment selection was clinical. Our results suggest that this scarcity, mediated by an approach we call sociotherapeutic rationality (i.e. maximization of clinical success), may have led to inequities in the provision of free ART. This approach may be detrimental to assuring equity since the most impoverished lack resources to pay for services that maximize clinical success (e.g. viral load) that would increase their chances of being selected for treatment. However, once selected into treatment, attempts were made to ration-out complementary services more equitably. This study demonstrates the risks entailed by medication scarcity, which presents NGOs and health professionals with impossible choices that run counter to the philosophy of equity in access to treatment. Amid growing concerns of an international funding retreat for ART, it is important to learn from the past in order to better manage the potentially inequitable consequences of ART scarcity.
机译:在2010年之前,布基纳法索一直是取消抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)使用费国际趋势的例外。仍然希望患者每月为ART支付1500F CFA(2欧元)。但是,许多非政府组织(NGOs)豁免患者付款。这项研究的目的是调查非政府组织如何为政府提供的抗逆转录病毒疗法选择免税付款的受益人,以及如何分配补充的医疗和社会心理服务。对于这项定性研究,我们与9个非政府组织(4,000名患者),两个非政府组织协调机构和一个国家计划的计划人员进行了13次个人访谈和三个焦点小组讨论(n = 13人)。对这些相遇进行记录和转录,并对它们的内容进行主题分析。结果已提交给非政府组织以征求反馈。结果表明,没有具体的准则来确定需要豁免付款的患者。以前,布基纳法索缺乏抗逆转录病毒疗法,治疗选择的主要标准是临床。我们的结果表明,这种稀缺性是由我们所谓的社会合理性治疗(即临床成功的最大化)介导的,可能导致了免费ART的提供不公平。这种方法可能不利于确保公平,因为最贫穷的人缺乏资源来支付使临床成功(例如病毒载量)最大化的服务,这将增加他们被选中接受治疗的机会。但是,一旦选择接受治疗,就会尝试更公平地分配补充服务。这项研究证明了药物匮乏带来的风险,这给非政府组织和卫生专业人员带来了无法选择的选择,这与获得治疗的公平理念背道而驰。在对国际抗逆转录病毒疗法撤退的担忧日益增加的同时,重要的是要从过去中学习,以便更好地管理抗逆转录病毒疗法的潜在不平等后果。

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