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Village doctors: a national telephone survey of Bangladesh's lay medical practitioners

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posted on 2024-07-05, 01:45 authored by Olav MuurlinkOlav Muurlink, N Uzzaman, Rhonda BoormanRhonda Boorman, S Binte Kibria, Talitha BestTalitha Best, AW Taylor-Robinson
BACKGROUND: Bangladesh outperforms its Least Developed Country (LDC) status on a range of health measures including life expectancy. Its frontline medical practitioners, however, are not formally trained medical professionals, but instead lightly-trained 'village doctors' able to prescribe modern pharmaceuticals. This current study represents the most complete national survey of these practitioners and their informal 'clinics'. METHODS: The study is based on a national Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) of 1,000 informal practitioners. Participants were sampled from all eight divisions and all 64 districts of Bangladesh, including 682 participants chosen from the purposively recruited Refresher Training program conducted by the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (ICDDR,B), supplemented with 318 additional participants recruited through snowball sampling. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: In addition to demographics, village doctors were asked about the characteristics of their 'clinics' including their equipment, their training, income and referral practices. RESULTS: Three quarters of the wholly male sample had not completed an undergraduate program, and none of the sample had received any bachelor-level university training in medicine. Medical training was confined to a range of short-course offerings. Village doctor 'clinics' are highly dependent on the sale of pharmaceuticals, with few charging a consultation fee. Income was not related to degree of short-course uptake but was related positively to degree of formal education. Finally, practitioners showed a strong tendency to refer patients to the professional medical care system. CONCLUSIONS: Bangladesh's village doctor sector provides an important pathway to professional, trained medical care, and provides some level of care to those who cannot afford or otherwise access the nation's established healthcare system. However, the degree to which relatively untrained paramedical practitioners are prescribing conventional medicines has concerning health implications.

History

Volume

23

Issue

1

Start Page

1

End Page

9

Number of Pages

9

eISSN

1472-6963

ISSN

1472-6963

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Publisher License

CC BY

Additional Rights

CC-BY

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2023-09-07

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Electronic

Journal

BMC health services research

Article Number

964