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Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases

Background: Control and prevention of infectious diseases has been a primary health mandate. The reporting system is a vital step in preventing and controlling of these diseases. Most important, healthcare workers who have a responsibility to report must be aware of this responsibility. The present...

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Autores principales: Almugti, Hani S, AlMarei, Shahd, Jurebi, Razan M, Almutiri, Meqren K, Alghamdi, Basil, Alghamdi, Abdullah S, Alhajry, Hamad H, Al-Helali, Sarah M, Alzaidi, Ashwaq H, Alzahrani, Yahya S, Al-Mutairy, Mamdouh H, Jurebi, Abdulrahman, Alshareef, Ammar, Almarzooq, Abduljalil, Alsaedi, Marwa Q
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36865961
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34306
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author Almugti, Hani S
AlMarei, Shahd
Jurebi, Razan M
Almutiri, Meqren K
Alghamdi, Basil
Alghamdi, Abdullah S
Alhajry, Hamad H
Al-Helali, Sarah M
Alzaidi, Ashwaq H
Alzahrani, Yahya S
Al-Mutairy, Mamdouh H
Jurebi, Abdulrahman
Alshareef, Ammar
Almarzooq, Abduljalil
Alsaedi, Marwa Q
author_facet Almugti, Hani S
AlMarei, Shahd
Jurebi, Razan M
Almutiri, Meqren K
Alghamdi, Basil
Alghamdi, Abdullah S
Alhajry, Hamad H
Al-Helali, Sarah M
Alzaidi, Ashwaq H
Alzahrani, Yahya S
Al-Mutairy, Mamdouh H
Jurebi, Abdulrahman
Alshareef, Ammar
Almarzooq, Abduljalil
Alsaedi, Marwa Q
author_sort Almugti, Hani S
collection PubMed
description Background: Control and prevention of infectious diseases has been a primary health mandate. The reporting system is a vital step in preventing and controlling of these diseases. Most important, healthcare workers who have a responsibility to report must be aware of this responsibility. The present study aimed to improve the compliance of primary healthcare workers against reportable tropical and non-tropical dermatological diseases. Objective of the study: The objective was to assess the knowledge, skills, and practice of primary healthcare workers in Saudi Arabia regarding the surveillance system of reportable tropical and non-tropical dermatological diseases using an assessment tool featuring closed-ended questions. As a secondary objective, this study assessed the satisfaction of primary healthcare workers with the surveillance system. Subjects and methods: Through a cross-sectional design, the study used an electronic self-administered questionnaire targeting the primary healthcare workers who met the inclusion criteria through a non-probability sampling technique. Results: By the end of the study period, data had been collected from 377 primary healthcare workers. Slightly more than half of them worked for the ministry of health facilities. In the last year, the vast majority (88%) of participants did not report any infectious diseases. Poor or low knowledge was reported by almost half of the participants concerning which dermatological diseases should be notified immediately on clinical suspicion or routinely on a weekly basis. Clinically and in response to the skills assessment, 57% of the participants had lower skills scores in detecting and identifying the skin ulcer of leishmania. Half of the participants were less satisfied with the feedback after their notification and considered the notification forms complicated and time-consuming, especially with the usual high workload in primary healthcare centers. Furthermore, the observed significant differences (p < 0.001) in knowledge and skill scores were demonstrated with female healthcare workers, older participants, employees from the Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, and workers with more than ten years of experience. Conclusion:The present study has shown the limitations of public health surveillance due to underreporting and lack of timeliness. The dissatisfaction of study participants with feedback after the notification step is another finding that demonstrates the need for collaboration among public health authorities and healthcare workers. Fortunately, health departments can implement measures to improve practitioners' awareness through continuous medical education and providing frequent feedback to overcome these hurdles.
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spelling pubmed-99736682023-03-01 Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases Almugti, Hani S AlMarei, Shahd Jurebi, Razan M Almutiri, Meqren K Alghamdi, Basil Alghamdi, Abdullah S Alhajry, Hamad H Al-Helali, Sarah M Alzaidi, Ashwaq H Alzahrani, Yahya S Al-Mutairy, Mamdouh H Jurebi, Abdulrahman Alshareef, Ammar Almarzooq, Abduljalil Alsaedi, Marwa Q Cureus Preventive Medicine Background: Control and prevention of infectious diseases has been a primary health mandate. The reporting system is a vital step in preventing and controlling of these diseases. Most important, healthcare workers who have a responsibility to report must be aware of this responsibility. The present study aimed to improve the compliance of primary healthcare workers against reportable tropical and non-tropical dermatological diseases. Objective of the study: The objective was to assess the knowledge, skills, and practice of primary healthcare workers in Saudi Arabia regarding the surveillance system of reportable tropical and non-tropical dermatological diseases using an assessment tool featuring closed-ended questions. As a secondary objective, this study assessed the satisfaction of primary healthcare workers with the surveillance system. Subjects and methods: Through a cross-sectional design, the study used an electronic self-administered questionnaire targeting the primary healthcare workers who met the inclusion criteria through a non-probability sampling technique. Results: By the end of the study period, data had been collected from 377 primary healthcare workers. Slightly more than half of them worked for the ministry of health facilities. In the last year, the vast majority (88%) of participants did not report any infectious diseases. Poor or low knowledge was reported by almost half of the participants concerning which dermatological diseases should be notified immediately on clinical suspicion or routinely on a weekly basis. Clinically and in response to the skills assessment, 57% of the participants had lower skills scores in detecting and identifying the skin ulcer of leishmania. Half of the participants were less satisfied with the feedback after their notification and considered the notification forms complicated and time-consuming, especially with the usual high workload in primary healthcare centers. Furthermore, the observed significant differences (p < 0.001) in knowledge and skill scores were demonstrated with female healthcare workers, older participants, employees from the Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, and workers with more than ten years of experience. Conclusion:The present study has shown the limitations of public health surveillance due to underreporting and lack of timeliness. The dissatisfaction of study participants with feedback after the notification step is another finding that demonstrates the need for collaboration among public health authorities and healthcare workers. Fortunately, health departments can implement measures to improve practitioners' awareness through continuous medical education and providing frequent feedback to overcome these hurdles. Cureus 2023-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9973668/ /pubmed/36865961 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34306 Text en Copyright © 2023, Almugti et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Preventive Medicine
Almugti, Hani S
AlMarei, Shahd
Jurebi, Razan M
Almutiri, Meqren K
Alghamdi, Basil
Alghamdi, Abdullah S
Alhajry, Hamad H
Al-Helali, Sarah M
Alzaidi, Ashwaq H
Alzahrani, Yahya S
Al-Mutairy, Mamdouh H
Jurebi, Abdulrahman
Alshareef, Ammar
Almarzooq, Abduljalil
Alsaedi, Marwa Q
Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title_full Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title_fullStr Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title_full_unstemmed Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title_short Compliance of Primary Healthcare Workers in Saudi Arabia With the National Surveillance System of Tropical and Non-tropical Dermatological Diseases
title_sort compliance of primary healthcare workers in saudi arabia with the national surveillance system of tropical and non-tropical dermatological diseases
topic Preventive Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36865961
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.34306
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