Patient-centered care and associated factors at public and private hospitals of Addis Ababa : patients' perspective

Frehiwot Birhanu, Kiddus Yitbarek, Animut Addis, Dereje Alemayehu, Nigusie Shifera

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Patient-centered care is a practice of caring for patients in ways that are valuable to the individual patient and families. Implementation of the practice is a common problem worldwide. In Ethiopia, the available information is limited and is largely skewed to certain dimensions of the practice. Objective: To assess the patient-centered health care practice and associated factors among public and private general hospitals of Addis Ababa 2020. Methods: An institution-based comparative cross-sectional study was conducted in two public, and seven private general hospitals located in Addis Ababa from April 08 to May 20, 2020. A multistage sampling technique was employed to select the study participants. Data were collected using an interviewer-administered structured questioner, then entered into Epi-data version 3.1, and finally analyzed using SPSS version 25. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify independent predictors of clients' perceived patient-centered care. Statistical significance was declared at p-value <0.05 and adjusted odds ratio with 95% confidence interval. Results: A total of 570 patients were involved with 99.8% response rate. About 49% (95% CI: 45.0-53.1) of patients rated the practice as good. It was 27.8% (95% CI: 22.5-33.1), and 70.2% (95% CI: 64.6-75.4) for public, and private hospitals, respectively Hospital type (AOR:0.21; 95% CI: 0.13-0.35), service easiness (AOR:3.3; 95% CI: 2.0-5.8), hospital attractiveness (AOR:2.3; 95% CI: 1.2,4.5), privacy to access care (AOR:2.0; 95% CI: 1.1,4.1), information on plan of care (AOR:2.3; 95% CI; 1.1,4.6), information on medication (AOR:3.1; 95% CI; 1.5,6.3), and perceived intimacy with the provider (AOR: 0.4; 95% CI;0.2,0.8) were the factors associated with the practice. Conclusion: Even though providing patient-centered care has been the focus of quality improvement in Ethiopia, this study showed it is mostly being implemented from the traditional provider-centered approach and public hospitals were lower in practice than private hospitals.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)107-116
Number of pages10
JournalPatient Related Outcome Measures
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

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2021 Birhanu et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms (https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php)

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