Challenges to the delivery of clinical diabetes services in Ghana created by the COVID-19 pandemic
Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Health Services Research & Polic
Abstract
Objective: The barriers to delivering clinical non-communicable disease services in low- and middle-income countries
have risen with the onset of COVID-19. Using Ghana as a case study, this article examines the changes COVID-19 has
brought to diabetes service delivery and considers policy responses to deal with future such outbreaks.
Methods: We conducted 18 interviews between November 2020 and February 2021 with health professionals and
administrators from primary, secondary and tertiary facilities within the Ghana Health Service. The analysis was performed
using deductive and inductive methods.
Results: There were six general themes in interviewees’ responses: (1) COVID-19 had exacerbated the problems of high
medicine and service costs and medicine shortages, (2) the pandemic had exacerbated problems of poor patient record
keeping, (3) COVID-19 had reduced the availability of suitably trained health providers, (4) staff had become demoralized
by management’s unwillingness to make innovative changes to cope with the pandemic, (5) COVID-19 led to a reor ganization of diabetes services, and (6) the country’s national health insurance scheme lacked flexibility in dealing with the
pandemic.
Conclusions: Access to resources is limited in LMICs. However, our study highlights practical policy responses that can
improve health providers’ response to COVID-19 and future pandemics
Description
Research Article
Keywords
diabetes service delivery, COVID-19, Ghana