CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT IN RURAL PAKISTAN

Main Article Content

Shabnam Wazir
Waqas Hussain
Muhammad Afrasiab Khan
Atif Nisar
Safdar Ali
Inam-u-llah
Naveed Ahmad Jhamat
Ghulam Mustafa
Muhammad Sheraz Qureshi
Ravi Dutt Sharma

Keywords

Primary healthcare, Healthcare facilities, Service readiness, Health systems

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to assess the usual precautions, basic amenities, basic equipment, lab capacity, and needed pharmaceuticals in Pakistani public-primary healthcare facilities.


Study Design: Cross-sectional study


Place and Duration: This study was contacted at Department of Anatomy, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, Khyber Medical University, Peshawar


Methods: Several structured questionnaires were included in this survey, with the subjects being the rural health facilities. Information was supplied by the administrative leaders of all public primary health care facilities in Pakistan's rural districts, as well as by extra employees if needed. SPSS version 20 was used to analyze the data.


Results: Out of the 20 health facilities that were evaluated, only 46 percent of RHCs had a sign board that could be read. 58% of RHCs have a female medical officer serving as the administrative head. The things that were ignored the most were the restroom and electricity backup. Pakistan's Rural Health Care (RHC) has a difficulty because the Basic Health Units' (BHUs') laboratory capability, standard precautions, and basic facilities all clearly deviated from standards.


Conclusion: The government of Pakistan is clearly working hard to meet primary healthcare targets, but more has to be done to mainstream institutional, political, and societal commitments along with updated RHC standards.

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