Health system challenges to hypertension and related non-communicable diseases prevention and treatment: perspectives from Ghanaian stakeholders
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BMC Health Services Research
Abstract
Background: Hypertension, itself a cardiovascular condition, is a significant risk factor for other cardiovascular
diseases. Hypertension is recognized as a major public health challenge in Ghana. Beginning in 2014, a collaborative
team launched the community-based hypertension improvement program (ComHIP) in one health district in
Ghana. The ComHIP project, a public-private partnership, tests a community-based model that engages the private
sector and utilizes information and communication technology (ICT) to control hypertension. This paper, focuses on
the various challenges associated with managing hypertension in Ghana, as reported by ComHIP stakeholders.
Methods: A total of 55 informants – comprising patients, health care professionals, licensed chemical sellers (LCS),
national and sub-national policymakers – were purposively selected for interview and focus group discussions
(FGDs). Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Where applicable, transcriptions were translated
directly from local language to English. The data were then analysed using two-step thematic analysis. The protocol
was approved by the two ethics review committees based in Ghana and the third, based in the United Kingdom.
All participants were interviewed after giving informed consent.
Results: Our data have implications for the on-going implementation of ComHIP, especially the importance of
policy maker buy-in, and the benefits, as well as drawbacks, of the program to different stakeholders. While our
data show that the ComHIP initiative is acceptable to patients and healthcare providers – increasing providers’
knowledge on hypertension and patients’ awareness of same- there were implementation challenges identified by
both patients and providers. Policy level challenges relate to task-sharing bottlenecks, which precluded nurses from
prescribing or dispensing antihypertensives, and LCS from stocking same. Medication adherence and the
phenomenon of medical pluralism in Ghana were identified challenges. The perspectives from the national level
stakeholders enable elucidation of whole of health system challenges to ComHIP and similarly designed
programmes.
Conclusions: This paper sheds important light on the patient/individual, and system level challenges to
hypertension and related non-communicable disease prevention and treatment in Ghana. The data show that
although the ComHIP initiative is acceptable to patients and healthcare providers, policy level task-sharing
bottlenecks preclude optimal implementation of ComHIP.
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Research Article