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Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study

INTRODUCTION: Low- and middle-income countries bear the majority of neurosurgical disease burden and patients face significant barriers to seeking, reaching, and receiving care. We aimed to understand barriers to seeking care among adult Africans by evaluating the public perception, knowledge of ava...

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Autores principales: Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A., Umutoni, Alice, Atabe Ngwene, Neri Ngole, Ngoma, Placide, Nyalundja, Arsene Daniel, Nteranya, Daniel Safari, Olobatoke, Tunde A., Ogunfolaji, Oloruntoba, Sichimba, Dawin, Najjuma, Joanitor, Sebopelo, Lorraine Arabang, Ndajiwo, Aliyu, Bamimore, Michael A., Adegboyega, Gideon, Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8929639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35298488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264955
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author Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A.
Umutoni, Alice
Atabe Ngwene, Neri Ngole
Ngoma, Placide
Nyalundja, Arsene Daniel
Nteranya, Daniel Safari
Olobatoke, Tunde A.
Ogunfolaji, Oloruntoba
Sichimba, Dawin
Najjuma, Joanitor
Sebopelo, Lorraine Arabang
Ndajiwo, Aliyu
Bamimore, Michael A.
Adegboyega, Gideon
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
author_facet Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A.
Umutoni, Alice
Atabe Ngwene, Neri Ngole
Ngoma, Placide
Nyalundja, Arsene Daniel
Nteranya, Daniel Safari
Olobatoke, Tunde A.
Ogunfolaji, Oloruntoba
Sichimba, Dawin
Najjuma, Joanitor
Sebopelo, Lorraine Arabang
Ndajiwo, Aliyu
Bamimore, Michael A.
Adegboyega, Gideon
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
author_sort Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Low- and middle-income countries bear the majority of neurosurgical disease burden and patients face significant barriers to seeking, reaching, and receiving care. We aimed to understand barriers to seeking care among adult Africans by evaluating the public perception, knowledge of availability, and readiness to use neurosurgical care services. METHODS: An e-survey was distributed among African adults who are not in the health sector or pursuing a health-related degree. Chi-square test and ANOVA were used for bivariate analysis and the alpha value was set at 0.05. Odds ratios and their 95% confidence intervals were calculated. RESULTS: Six hundred and sixty-two adults from 16 African countries aged 25.4 (95% CI: 25.0, 25.9) responded. The majority lived in urban settings (90.6%) and were English-speaking (76.4%) men (54.8%). Most respondents (76.3%) could define neurosurgery adequately. The most popular neurosurgical diseases were traumatic brain injury (76.3%), congenital brain and spine diseases (67.7%), and stroke (60.4%). Unwillingness to use or recommend in-country neurosurgical services was associated with rural dwelling (β = -0.69, SE = 0.31, P = 0.03), lack of awareness about the availability of neurosurgeons in-country (β = 1.02, SE = 0.20, P<0.001), and believing neurosurgery is expensive (β = -1.49, SE = 0.36, P<0.001). CONCLUSION: Knowledge levels about neurosurgery are satisfactory; however, healthcare-seeking is negatively impacted by multiple factors.
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spelling pubmed-89296392022-03-18 Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A. Umutoni, Alice Atabe Ngwene, Neri Ngole Ngoma, Placide Nyalundja, Arsene Daniel Nteranya, Daniel Safari Olobatoke, Tunde A. Ogunfolaji, Oloruntoba Sichimba, Dawin Najjuma, Joanitor Sebopelo, Lorraine Arabang Ndajiwo, Aliyu Bamimore, Michael A. Adegboyega, Gideon Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Low- and middle-income countries bear the majority of neurosurgical disease burden and patients face significant barriers to seeking, reaching, and receiving care. We aimed to understand barriers to seeking care among adult Africans by evaluating the public perception, knowledge of availability, and readiness to use neurosurgical care services. METHODS: An e-survey was distributed among African adults who are not in the health sector or pursuing a health-related degree. Chi-square test and ANOVA were used for bivariate analysis and the alpha value was set at 0.05. Odds ratios and their 95% confidence intervals were calculated. RESULTS: Six hundred and sixty-two adults from 16 African countries aged 25.4 (95% CI: 25.0, 25.9) responded. The majority lived in urban settings (90.6%) and were English-speaking (76.4%) men (54.8%). Most respondents (76.3%) could define neurosurgery adequately. The most popular neurosurgical diseases were traumatic brain injury (76.3%), congenital brain and spine diseases (67.7%), and stroke (60.4%). Unwillingness to use or recommend in-country neurosurgical services was associated with rural dwelling (β = -0.69, SE = 0.31, P = 0.03), lack of awareness about the availability of neurosurgeons in-country (β = 1.02, SE = 0.20, P<0.001), and believing neurosurgery is expensive (β = -1.49, SE = 0.36, P<0.001). CONCLUSION: Knowledge levels about neurosurgery are satisfactory; however, healthcare-seeking is negatively impacted by multiple factors. Public Library of Science 2022-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8929639/ /pubmed/35298488 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264955 Text en © 2022 Ikwuegbuenyi et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ikwuegbuenyi, Chibuikem A.
Umutoni, Alice
Atabe Ngwene, Neri Ngole
Ngoma, Placide
Nyalundja, Arsene Daniel
Nteranya, Daniel Safari
Olobatoke, Tunde A.
Ogunfolaji, Oloruntoba
Sichimba, Dawin
Najjuma, Joanitor
Sebopelo, Lorraine Arabang
Ndajiwo, Aliyu
Bamimore, Michael A.
Adegboyega, Gideon
Kanmounye, Ulrick Sidney
Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title_full Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title_short Public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in Sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study
title_sort public awareness, knowledge of availability, and willingness to use neurosurgical care services in sub-saharan africa: a cross-sectional study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8929639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35298488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264955
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