Title of article :
Health system responsiveness for outpatient care in people with diabetes Mellitus in Tehran
Author/Authors :
Sajjadi, Fatemeh Department of Community Medicine - Baqiyatallah University of Medical Science,Tehran, Iran , Moradi-Lakeh, Maziar Department of Community Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Nojomi, Marzieh Department of Community Medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Baradaran, Hamid R Endocrine Research Center - Institute of Endocrinology and Metabolism - Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Azizi, Fereidoun Department of Endocrine Diseases - Shaheed-Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: World Health Organization (WHO) defines three goals to assess the performance of
a health system: the state of health, fairness in financial contribution and responsiveness. We assessed
the responsiveness of health system for patients with diabetes in a defined population cohort
in Tehran, Iran.
Methods: Total responsiveness and eight domains (prompt attention, dignity, communication, autonomy,
confidentiality, choice, basic amenities and discrimination) were assessed in 150 patients
with diabetes as a representative sample from the Tehran Glucose and Lipid Study (TLGS) population
cohort. We used the WHO questionnaire and methods for analysis of responsiveness.
Results: With respect to outpatient services, 67% (n=100) were classified as Good for total responsiveness.
The best and the worse performing results were related to information confidentiality (84%
good responsiveness) and autonomy (51% good responsiveness), respectively. About 61% chose
“communication” as the most important domain of responsiveness; it was on the 4th rank of performance.
The proportions of poor responsiveness were higher in women, individuals with lower income,
lower level of education, and longer history of diabetes. “Discrimination” was considered discrimination
as the cause of inappropriate services by 15%, and 29% had limited access to services
because of financial unaffordability.
Conclusion: Health system responsiveness is not appropriate for diabetic patients. Improvement of
responsiveness needs comprehensive planning to improve attitudes of healthcare providers and system
behavior. Activities should be prioritized through considering weaker domains of performance
and more important domains from the patients’ perspective.
Keywords :
Iran , Diabetes mellitus , Patient satisfaction , Delivery of healthcare , Responsiveness
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics