RESUMO
BACKGROUND: In view of the high local prevalence of asthma, the extent of recognition and appropriate management of childhood asthma was studied in a large suburban area of Cape Town. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study based on random community sample of schools. METHOD: 1,955 parents of sub B pupils from 16 schools completed a questionnaire, followed by: (i) an interview of the parents of 348 symptomatic children; and (ii) bronchial responsiveness testing on 254 children. The final case group consisted of 242 children with reported asthma or multiple asthma symptoms on both questionnaires. Children in whom asthma was acknowledged were compared with those in whom it was not. RESULTS: Overall, any past or current ('ever') asthma was acknowledged by respondents in only 53% of the children, and current asthma in only 37.1%. While most children had received treatment in the previous 12 months, 66.1% of the recognised group were on current treatment (23.2% on daily treatment), compared with 37% of the unrecognised group (3% daily). Salbutamol and theophylline syrups were the most common types of medication, while inhalers and anti-inflammatory medications were underused. Only a minority of parents reported the child ever having used a peak flow meter, or volunteered knowledge of preventive measures. Current treatment, and to a lesser degree recognition of asthma by parents, were more common among children on medical aid and of higher socio-economic status. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that ways need to be found: (i) to increase the use of current asthma treatment guidelines by practitioners; (ii) to provide access to comprehensive care by children not on medical aid; and (iii) to improve education of parents in home management measures such as severity assessment and avoidance of smoking, allergen and dietary triggers.
Assuntos
Asma/diagnóstico , Asma/tratamento farmacológico , Asma/epidemiologia , Testes de Provocação Brônquica/métodos , Distribuição de Qui-Quadrado , Criança , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Volume Expiratório Forçado , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Masculino , Pais , Distribuição Aleatória , Fatores Socioeconômicos , África do Sul/epidemiologia , Inquéritos e QuestionáriosRESUMO
The need for health care reform in South Africa is acknowledged by the government as well as by the non-governmental health sector. There is, however, no unanimity regarding the nature of the envisaged reform. A country-wide postal survey of 700 private sector general practitioners (GPs) from a commercial database of 5,000 was conducted to explore attitudes towards health care. A response rate of 67.4% was obtained. Respondents were mostly male (92%) and urban-based (64%). The median age was 42 years. Most respondents: (i) believed health care to be a right for all citizens; (ii) favoured private or a combination of private and public funding mechanisms with fee-for-service arrangements; (iii) opposed cost-containment measures imposed by funders, e.g. medical aids; and (iv) believed doctors should be responsible for primary care in under-served areas. After sex, age, location (urban versus rural) and GP postgraduate qualification had been controlled for by means of logistic regression techniques, the university at which a respondent's basic degree was obtained emerged as the only independent predictor of attitudes to the following: (i) comprehensive care as a right; (ii) integration of the public and private sectors; (iii) preferred funding source for a future health system; and (iv) preference for fee-for-service remuneration. Both university and gender independently predicted attitudes on GPs' income. Graduates of white, Afrikaans-medium universities were strongly in favour of a privately funded and fee-for-service orientated system. Those who qualified at black universities, on the other hand, favoured public funding with less emphasison fee-for-service.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)