A doctor at a PHC clinic: A ‘must-have’ or ‘nice-to-have’?

Authors

  • TP Kerry District Clinical Specialist Team, uMgungundlovu District, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
  • P G T Cudahy Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, USA; Department of Internal Medicine, Harry Gwala Regional Hospital, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
  • H L Holst uMgungundlovu District, South Africa
  • A Ramsunder Northdale Hospital, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
  • N G McGrath Department of Anatomical Pathology, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7196/SAMJ.2023.v113i1.16700

Keywords:

NHI, NCD, HIV

Abstract

Background. Many patients have their healthcare needs met at primary healthcare (PHC) clinics in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), without having to travel to a hospital. Doctors form part of the teams at many PHC clinics throughout KZN, offering a decentralised medical service in a PHC clinic.
Objectives. To assess the benefit of having a medical doctor managing patients with more complex clinical conditions at PHC clinic level in uMgungundlovu District, KZN. Two key questions were researched: (i) were the patients whom the clinic doctors managed of sufficient clinical complexity that they warranted a doctor managing them, rather than a PHC nurse clinician? and (ii) what was the spectrum of medical conditions that the clinic doctors managed?
Methods. Doctors collected data at all medical consultations in PHC clinics in uMgungundlovu during February 2020. A single-page
standardised data tool was used to collect data at every consultation.
Results. Thirty-five doctors were working in 45 PHC clinics in February 2020. Twenty-six of the clinic doctors were National Health
Insurance (NHI)-employed. The 35 doctors conducted 7 424 patient consultations in February. Staff in the PHC clinics conducted 143 421 consultations that month, mostly by PHC nurse clinicians. The doctors concluded that 6 947 (93.6%) of the 7 424 doctor consultations were of sufficient complexity as to warrant management by a doctor. The spectrum of medical conditions was as follows: (i) consultations for maternal and child health; n=761 (10.2%); (ii) consultations involving non-communicable diseases (NCDs), n=4 372 (58.9%) – the six most common NCDs were, in order: hypertension, diabetes, arthritis, epilepsy, mental illness and renal disease; (iii) consultations involving communicable diseases constituted 1 745 (23.5%) of cases; and (iv) consultations involving laboratory result interpretation 1 180 (15.9%).
Conclusion. This research showed that at a PHC clinic the more complex patient consultations did indeed require the skills and knowledge of a medical doctor managing these patients. These data support the benefit of a doctor working at every PHC clinic: the doctor is a ‘musthave’ member of the PHC clinic team, offering a regular, reliable and predictable medical service.

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Published

2022-12-20

Issue

Section

Research

How to Cite

1.
Kerry T, Cudahy PGT, Holst HL, Ramsunder A, McGrath NG. A doctor at a PHC clinic: A ‘must-have’ or ‘nice-to-have’?. S Afr Med J [Internet]. 2022 Dec. 20 [cited 2025 Jan. 19];113(1):24-30. Available from: https://samajournals.co.za/index.php/samj/article/view/631

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