Tropical Medicine and Health (Nov 2022)

Primary health care situations in remote rural villages of the Savannakhet province, Lao People’s Democratic Republic

  • Daisuke Nonaka,
  • Nouhak Inthavong,
  • Kenzo Takahashi,
  • Ketmany Chanthakoumane,
  • Yuko Toyama,
  • Chanthaly Luangphaxay,
  • Tiengkham Pongvongsa,
  • Sengchanh Kounnavong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41182-022-00482-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background To improve the health of the rural population in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR), the government has emphasized a primary health care approach in the Health Sector Reform Strategy by 2025. The objective of the present study was to describe the health-related situations of remote rural villages of the Lao PDR to inform strategies for promoting primary health care in such villages. Methods Ten remote rural villages were purposively selected from the catchment areas of two health centers in the Xepon district, Savannakhet province. The surveyors collected data by conducting a questionnaire-based interview with village health volunteers and by observing the village environment in 2018. The survey focused on village situations on the eight elements of primary health care (health education; food supply and nutrition; safe water and basic sanitation; maternal and child health care; immunization; prevention and control of locally endemic diseases; treatment of common diseases and injuries; and provision of essential drug). Results The common health problems were diarrhea, followed by malaria, and cough. The identified possible risk factors for the health problems were not washing hands with soap, open defecation, not boiling drinking water, not exclusively breastfeeding, presence of animal feces on the village ground, absence of garbage management system, not using a bed net when sleeping in the forest, and exposure to indoor cooking and tobacco smoke. In many villages, villagers were not able to eat enough food and did not eat protein-rich food and vegetables daily. Conclusions Potential risk factors for the reported common health problems were often prevalent in the study villages. Villagers can address most of these risk factors, as interventions to address such risk factors do not require a large financial input. There is a need for intersectoral actions between the health and other sectors to address food shortages and indoor air pollution due to indoor cooking using biomass fuel.

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