cover image: Challenges and Opportunities in the Continuity of Care for Hypertension : A Mixed-Methods Study Embedded in a Primary Health Care Intervention in Tajikistan

20.500.12592/jb2zws

Challenges and Opportunities in the Continuity of Care for Hypertension : A Mixed-Methods Study Embedded in a Primary Health Care Intervention in Tajikistan

3 Dec 2019

Hypertension, a significant risk factor for ischemic heart disease and other chronic conditions, is the third-highest cause of death and disability in Tajikistan. Thus, ensuring the early detection and appropriate management of hypertension is a core element of strategies to improve population health in Tajikistan. For a strategy to be successful, it should be informed by the causes of gaps in service delivery and feasible solutions to these challenges. The objective of this study was to undertake a systematic assessment of hypertension case detection and retention in care within Tajikistan’s primary health care system, and to identify challenges and appropriate solutions. We review the results for the case detection stage of the cascade of care, which had the most significant gaps. Of the half a million people with hypertension in Khatlon and Sogd Oblasts (administrative regions), about 10% have been diagnosed in Khatlon and only 5% in Sogd. Barriers to case detection include misinformation about hypertension, ambiguous protocols, and limited delivery capacity. Solutions identified to these challenges were mobilizing faith-based organizations, scaling up screening through health caravans, task-shifting to increase provider supply, and introducing job aids for providers. Translating findings on discontinuities in care for hypertension and other chronic diseases to actionable policy insights can be facilitated by collaboration with local stakeholders, triangulation of data sources, and identifying the intersection between the feasible and the effective in defining solutions to service delivery challenges.
hypertension continuity of care health, nutrition and population :: health service management and delivery cascade of care implementation research

Authors

Chukwuma, Adanna, Gong, Estelle, Latypova, Mutriba, Fraser-Hurt, Nicole

Associated content
Journal website (version of record)
Collection(s)
C. Journal articles published externally
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4779-5
Externalcontent
External Content
Googlescholar linkpresent
yes
ISSN
1472-6963
Peerreview
Academic Peer Review
Published in
United States of America
Region country
Tajikistan
Rights
CC BY 4.0
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
UNIT
Health, Nutrition and Population Global Practice
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35573
Volume
19
citation
Cited 1 times in Scopus (view citations)
date disclosure
2021-05-13
journal nbpages
925
region administrative
Europe and Central Asia

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