The readiness of public primary health care (PUSKESMAS) for cardiovascular services in Makasar city, Indonesia


Dian Sidik Arsyad, - and Esliana Fitrida Hamsyah, - and Nurul Qalby, - and Jan Westerink, - and Maarten J. Cramer, - and Frank L. J. Visseren, - and Pieter A. Doevendans, - and Ansariadi Ansariadi, - The readiness of public primary health care (PUSKESMAS) for cardiovascular services in Makasar city, Indonesia. BMC Health Services Research (2022) 22:1112.

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Abstract (Abstrak)

Backgrounds: The increasing burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has become a major challenge globally, includ- ing in Indonesia. Understanding the readiness of primary health care facilities is necessary to confront the challenge of providing access to quality CVD health care services. Our study aimed to provide information regarding readiness to deliver CVD health services in public primary health care namely Puskesmas.
Methods: The study questionnaire was adapted from the World Health Organization (WHO) Service Availability and Readiness Assessment (SARA), modifed based on the package of essentials for non-communicable disease (PEN) and the Indonesian Ministry of health regulation. Data were collected from all Puskesmas facilities (N=47) located in Makassar city. We analysed relevant data following the WHO-SARA manual to assess the readiness of Puskesmas to deliver CVD services. Human resources, diagnostic capacity, supporting equipment, essential medication, infra- structure and guidelines, and ambulatory services domain were assessed based on the availability of each tracer item in a particular domain. The mean domain score was calculated based on the availability of tracer items within each domain. Furthermore, the means of all domains’ scores are expressed as an overall readiness index. Higher scores indicate greater readiness of Puskesmas to deliver CVD-related health care.
Results: Puskesmas delivers health promotion, disease prevention, and prompt diagnosis for cardiovascular-related diseases, including hypertension, diabetes, coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke. Meanwhile, basic treatments were observed in the majority of the Puskesmas. Long-term care for hypertension and diabetes patients and rehabili- tation for CHD and stroke were only observed in a few Puskesmas. The readiness score of Puskesmas to deliver CVD health care ranged from 60 to 86 for. Furthermore, there were 11 Puskesmas (23.4%) with a score below 75, indicat- ing a sub-optimal readiness for delivering CVD health services. A shortage of essential medicines and a low capacity for diagnostic testing were the most noticeable shortcomings leading to suboptimal readiness for high-quality CVD health services.
Conclusion: Close cooperation with the government and other related stakeholders is required to tackle the identi- fed shortcomings, especially the continuous monitoring of adequate supplies of medicines and diagnostic tools to achieve better CVD care for patients in Indonesia

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > RA Public aspects of medicine > RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine
Depositing User: - Andi Anna
Date Deposited: 14 Oct 2022 02:38
Last Modified: 14 Oct 2022 02:38
URI: http://repository.unhas.ac.id:443/id/eprint/21699

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