Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam

Abstract Background Traffic injuries place a significant burden on mortality, morbidity and health services worldwide. Qualitative factors are important determinants of health but they are often ignored in the study of injury and corresponding development of prehospital Emergency Medical Services (E...

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Main Authors: Thanh Tam Tran, Adrian Sleigh, Cathy Banwell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
EMS
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10539-9
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spelling doaj-0d62291c703e41108d66bb139fc36a2f2021-03-21T12:04:11ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-03-012111910.1186/s12889-021-10539-9Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in VietnamThanh Tam Tran0Adrian Sleigh1Cathy Banwell2National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, College of Health and Medicine, The Australian National UniversityNational Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, College of Health and Medicine, The Australian National UniversityNational Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, College of Health and Medicine, The Australian National UniversityAbstract Background Traffic injuries place a significant burden on mortality, morbidity and health services worldwide. Qualitative factors are important determinants of health but they are often ignored in the study of injury and corresponding development of prehospital Emergency Medical Services (EMS), especially in developing country settings. Here we report our research on sociocultural factors shaping pathways to hospital care for those injured on the roads and streets of Vietnam. Methods Qualitative fieldwork on pathways to emergency care of traffic injury was carried out from March to August 2016 in four hospitals in Vietnam, two in Ho Chi Minh City and two in Hanoi. Forty-eight traffic injured patients and their families were interviewed at length using a semi-structured topic guide regarding their journey to the hospital, help received, personal beliefs and other matters that they thought important. Transcribed interviews were analysed thematically guided by the three-delay model of emergency care. Results Seeking care was the first delay and reflected concerns over money and possessions. The family was central for transporting and caring for the patient but their late arrival prolonged time spent at the scene. Reaching care was the second delay and detours to inappropriate primary care services had postponed the eventual trip to the hospital. Ambulance services were misunderstood and believed to be suboptimal, making taxis the preferred form of transport. Receiving care at the hospital was the third delay and both patients and families distrusted service quality. Request to transfer to other hospitals often created more conflict. Overall, sociocultural beliefs of groups of people were very influential. Conclusions Analysis using the three-delay model for road traffic injury in Vietnam has revealed important barriers to emergency care. Hospital care needs to improve to enhance patient experiences and trust. Socioculture affects each of the three delays and needs to inform thinking of future developments of the EMS system, especially for countries with limited resources.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10539-9Emergency medical servicesEMSPrehospital careTraffic injuryVietnamLower-middle income country
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thanh Tam Tran
Adrian Sleigh
Cathy Banwell
spellingShingle Thanh Tam Tran
Adrian Sleigh
Cathy Banwell
Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
BMC Public Health
Emergency medical services
EMS
Prehospital care
Traffic injury
Vietnam
Lower-middle income country
author_facet Thanh Tam Tran
Adrian Sleigh
Cathy Banwell
author_sort Thanh Tam Tran
title Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
title_short Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
title_full Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
title_fullStr Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in Vietnam
title_sort pathways to care: a case study of traffic injury in vietnam
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Traffic injuries place a significant burden on mortality, morbidity and health services worldwide. Qualitative factors are important determinants of health but they are often ignored in the study of injury and corresponding development of prehospital Emergency Medical Services (EMS), especially in developing country settings. Here we report our research on sociocultural factors shaping pathways to hospital care for those injured on the roads and streets of Vietnam. Methods Qualitative fieldwork on pathways to emergency care of traffic injury was carried out from March to August 2016 in four hospitals in Vietnam, two in Ho Chi Minh City and two in Hanoi. Forty-eight traffic injured patients and their families were interviewed at length using a semi-structured topic guide regarding their journey to the hospital, help received, personal beliefs and other matters that they thought important. Transcribed interviews were analysed thematically guided by the three-delay model of emergency care. Results Seeking care was the first delay and reflected concerns over money and possessions. The family was central for transporting and caring for the patient but their late arrival prolonged time spent at the scene. Reaching care was the second delay and detours to inappropriate primary care services had postponed the eventual trip to the hospital. Ambulance services were misunderstood and believed to be suboptimal, making taxis the preferred form of transport. Receiving care at the hospital was the third delay and both patients and families distrusted service quality. Request to transfer to other hospitals often created more conflict. Overall, sociocultural beliefs of groups of people were very influential. Conclusions Analysis using the three-delay model for road traffic injury in Vietnam has revealed important barriers to emergency care. Hospital care needs to improve to enhance patient experiences and trust. Socioculture affects each of the three delays and needs to inform thinking of future developments of the EMS system, especially for countries with limited resources.
topic Emergency medical services
EMS
Prehospital care
Traffic injury
Vietnam
Lower-middle income country
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10539-9
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