期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Public Health
A GIS-based approach to identifying communities underserved by primary health care services—An Afghanistan case study
Public Health
Ramesh Nassery Mohammed1  Abdullah Khawari1  Jerome Aondona Shaguy1  Alaa Abouzied2 
[1]Health Emergency, World Health Organization, Kabul, Afghanistan
[2]Health Emergency, World Health Organization, Kabul, Afghanistan
[3]Public Health Department, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt
关键词: primary health care;    underserved and unserved populations;    Afghanistan;    geographical information system (GIS);    health indicator;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fpubh.2023.1209986
 received in 2023-05-25, accepted in 2023-08-04,  发布年份 2023
来源: Frontiers
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【 摘 要 】
Afghanistan has been in an active state of conflict and war for twenty continuous years. Social services like health and education have been badly affected, facing issues such as service disruption, brain drain, and generalized instability. Health indices that provide proxy indicators for general population wellness, such as maternal health, child mortality, and immunization coverage, show that the health services available to the Afghan population are sub-optimal. Investment in social service and interventions has increased. The World Bank and the United Nations through its agencies (The World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations' Children's Fund (UNICEF) are providing social support through targeted and strategic programs. However, the topographic and environmental realities of Afghanistan, with its broad mountain coverage, propensity toward natural disasters, and latent conflict, has made data and information gathering arduous. Since data is essential for measurement and management, the WHO Health Emergencies (WHE) information management unit at WHO Afghanistan has delivered an innovative form of data analysis, specialized and targeted at providing improved information on communities that are not adequately covered by health services. Deploying a geographical information system (GIS) approach, the WHE team has collated primary and secondary data from a combination of datasets to produce a far-reaching piece of analysis. The analysis of underserved communities in hard to reach, remote locations, provides a live, evidence-based information product. This provides a working tool that is essential to primary health programming and intervention in Afghanistan. The estimates show that approximately 9.5 million individuals in 22,181 villages across 34 provinces are underserved by primary health services. This paper is presented to explain the underpinning methodology.
【 授权许可】

Unknown   
Copyright © 2023 Mohammed, Khawari, Shaguy and Abouzied.

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