Improving Healthcare Access for the Underserved in Northern Nigeria: Can the Patent Medicine Vendors (PMVs) Really Help?
Abstract:
To address the health workforce deficit in underserved
communities, the Federal
Government of Nigeria is contemplating a licensing policy to delegate the provision
of some basic health services to patent medicine vendors (PMVs) manned by a skilled
health workforce. However, it remains unclear whether residents of underserved communities
intend to receive these healthcare services through PMVs. We, therefore, sought
to assess the intention to receive basic healthcare from PMVs among 665 heads of
households from randomly selected 40 underserved communities in two northern Nigeria
states. We used an interviewer-administered questionnaire to collect data between December 2021 and February
2022 for this cross-sectional study. The data were analyzed with STATA version 16.
We used the Chi-square test to investigate the factors associated with ‘intention’
and Binary logistic regression to identify its predictors. The level of statistical
significance was determined at P<0.05. We found that 38.8% of the underserved
intend to receive basic health services through PMVs and that respondents who reside
in rented buildings or temporary shelters and those who have a high level of trust
in PPMVs had higher odds of intending to receive healthcare through PMVs. These
findings suggest that PMVs can reach slightly above one-third of the underserved
with healthcare. We recommend that healthcare administrators should consider designing
additional complementary interventions that can be coherently implemented alongside
this initiative to significantly improve healthcare access among the underserved.
Keywords: Access, Communities,
Healthcare, Intention, Workforce.
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