Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali

Abstract Background Information on pathways of women seeking diagnostic services due to breast- related symptoms can help highlight challenges related to the healthcare system in improving early diagnosis of breast cancer. Methods We retrospectively analysed the entire patient pathway, from first sy...

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Main Authors: Kirstin Grosse Frie, Bakarou Kamaté, Cheick Bougadari Traoré, Bourama Coulibaly, Brahima Mallé, Eva Johanna Kantelhardt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6532-8
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author Kirstin Grosse Frie
Bakarou Kamaté
Cheick Bougadari Traoré
Bourama Coulibaly
Brahima Mallé
Eva Johanna Kantelhardt
author_facet Kirstin Grosse Frie
Bakarou Kamaté
Cheick Bougadari Traoré
Bourama Coulibaly
Brahima Mallé
Eva Johanna Kantelhardt
author_sort Kirstin Grosse Frie
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Information on pathways of women seeking diagnostic services due to breast- related symptoms can help highlight challenges related to the healthcare system in improving early diagnosis of breast cancer. Methods We retrospectively analysed the entire patient pathway, from first symptom recognition via initial healthcare visit up to final diagnosis at the pathology service in Mali. Data from questionnaire-based structured patient interviews (n = 124) were used to calculate time to first healthcare visit (median 91 days) and consecutive time to diagnosis (median 21 days) and to extract information on type of initially visited healthcare facility (community healthcare centre, referral hospital, tertiary hospital, private clinic). Median time to first healthcare visit and time to diagnosis and type of initially-visited healthcare facility were cross-tabulated with patient characteristics. An additional survey among (n = 30) medical doctors in the community healthcare centres and referral hospitals in Bamako was conducted to understand current knowledge and referral practice with respect to female patients with breast-related symptoms. Results Patients who initially visited private clinics had the shortest time to first healthcare visit (median 44 days), but the longest time to diagnosis (median 170 days). Patients visiting community healthcare centres and referral hospitals took longest for a first healthcare visit (median 153 and 206 days, respectively), but the time to diagnosis was shorter (median 95 and 7 days, respectively). The majority of patients (45%) initially visited a tertiary hospital; these patients had shortest total time to diagnosis (median 56 days health seeking and 8 days diagnostic time), but did not follow the recommended pathway for patients in the pyramidal healthcare system in Mali. The doctors’ survey showed lower breast cancer knowledge in the community healthcare centres than in the referral hospitals. However, most doctors felt able to recognise suspected cases of cancer and referred patients directly to a hospital. Conclusions The role of different healthcare facilities in ensuring triage of patients with breast-related symptoms needs to be defined before any early detection initiatives are implemented. Especially at the entry level of the healthcare system, the access and quality of health services need to be strengthened.
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spelling doaj.art-af750b451d074805945f50e368b04d382022-12-21T18:09:50ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582019-02-0119111010.1186/s12889-019-6532-8Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in MaliKirstin Grosse Frie0Bakarou Kamaté1Cheick Bougadari Traoré2Bourama Coulibaly3Brahima Mallé4Eva Johanna Kantelhardt5Institute for Medical Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Informatics, Martin-Luther-University Halle-WittenbergInstitute of Pathology, University Hospital Point GInstitute of Pathology, University Hospital Point GInstitute of Pathology, University Hospital Point GInstitute of Pathology, University Hospital Point GInstitute for Medical Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Informatics, Martin-Luther-University Halle-WittenbergAbstract Background Information on pathways of women seeking diagnostic services due to breast- related symptoms can help highlight challenges related to the healthcare system in improving early diagnosis of breast cancer. Methods We retrospectively analysed the entire patient pathway, from first symptom recognition via initial healthcare visit up to final diagnosis at the pathology service in Mali. Data from questionnaire-based structured patient interviews (n = 124) were used to calculate time to first healthcare visit (median 91 days) and consecutive time to diagnosis (median 21 days) and to extract information on type of initially visited healthcare facility (community healthcare centre, referral hospital, tertiary hospital, private clinic). Median time to first healthcare visit and time to diagnosis and type of initially-visited healthcare facility were cross-tabulated with patient characteristics. An additional survey among (n = 30) medical doctors in the community healthcare centres and referral hospitals in Bamako was conducted to understand current knowledge and referral practice with respect to female patients with breast-related symptoms. Results Patients who initially visited private clinics had the shortest time to first healthcare visit (median 44 days), but the longest time to diagnosis (median 170 days). Patients visiting community healthcare centres and referral hospitals took longest for a first healthcare visit (median 153 and 206 days, respectively), but the time to diagnosis was shorter (median 95 and 7 days, respectively). The majority of patients (45%) initially visited a tertiary hospital; these patients had shortest total time to diagnosis (median 56 days health seeking and 8 days diagnostic time), but did not follow the recommended pathway for patients in the pyramidal healthcare system in Mali. The doctors’ survey showed lower breast cancer knowledge in the community healthcare centres than in the referral hospitals. However, most doctors felt able to recognise suspected cases of cancer and referred patients directly to a hospital. Conclusions The role of different healthcare facilities in ensuring triage of patients with breast-related symptoms needs to be defined before any early detection initiatives are implemented. Especially at the entry level of the healthcare system, the access and quality of health services need to be strengthened.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6532-8Breast cancer early detectionPatient pathwaysHealthcare-seeking behaviourHealth systemSub-Saharan Africa
spellingShingle Kirstin Grosse Frie
Bakarou Kamaté
Cheick Bougadari Traoré
Bourama Coulibaly
Brahima Mallé
Eva Johanna Kantelhardt
Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
BMC Public Health
Breast cancer early detection
Patient pathways
Healthcare-seeking behaviour
Health system
Sub-Saharan Africa
title Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
title_full Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
title_fullStr Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
title_full_unstemmed Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
title_short Health system organisation and patient pathways: breast care patients’ trajectories and medical doctors’ practice in Mali
title_sort health system organisation and patient pathways breast care patients trajectories and medical doctors practice in mali
topic Breast cancer early detection
Patient pathways
Healthcare-seeking behaviour
Health system
Sub-Saharan Africa
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6532-8
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