科研成果 by Year: 2020

2020
Gao Q, Peng L, Min W, Nie J, Wang A, Shi Y, Shi H, Teuwen DE, Yi H. Regularity of Clinical Visits and Medication Adherence of Patients with Hypertension or Diabetes in Rural Yunnan Province of China. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020;17:9297.Abstract
Chronic diseases can be controlled through effective self-management. The purpose of this study is to explore the regularity of clinical visits and medication adherence of patients with hypertension or diabetes (PWHD), and its association with the first experience with care and individual factors in rural Southwestern China. This cross-sectional study was carried out in Yunnan province in 2018 and recruited 292 PWHD and 122 village clinics from 122 villages in 10 counties. Participants were interviewed using a structured questionnaire. Results show around 39% of hypertensive and 25% of diabetic patients neither visited physicians nor took medicine regularly during the preceding three months of the interview date. The regression results further indicated that individual characteristics of the PWHD, including patient age, health status, and economic level, as well as their first experience with care, were significantly associated with their regular healthcare behavior. In addition to providing medical services, on average each sample village clinic, with around two physicians, simultaneously managed 180 hypertensive and 45 diabetic patients. This study revealed the need for further reforms in terms of improving self-management and thus recommends an increase in the quantity and the quality of human resources in the primary healthcare realm in rural China.
Guo W, Sylvia S, Umble K, Chen Y, Zhang X, Yi* H. The competence of village clinicians in the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease in rural China: A nationally representative assessment. The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific. 2020;2:100026.
Li G, Xu J, Li L, Shi Z, Yi H, Chu J, Kardanova E, Li Y, Loyalka P, Rozelle* S. The Impacts of Highly Resourced Vocational Schools on Student Outcomes in China. China & World Economy. 2020:6.
Wang H, Guan H, Yi H, Seevak E, Manheim R, Boswell M, Rozelle S, Kotb S. Independent reading in rural China’s elementary schools: A mixed-methods analysis. International Journal of Educational Development. 2020;78:102241.
Wu Y, Zhou H, Ma X, Shi Y, Xue H, Zhou C, Yi H, Medina A, Li J, Sylvia S. Using standardised patients to assess the quality of medical records: an application and evidence from rural China. BMJ quality & safety. 2020;29:491-498.
Yi H, Liu H, Wang Z, Xue H, Sylvia S, Shi H, Teuwen DE, Han Y, Qin J. The Competence of Village Clinicians in the Diagnosis and Management of Childhood Epilepsy in Southwestern China and Its Determinants: A Cross-Sectional Study. The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific. 2020;3:100031.
Yi H, Wu P, Zhang X, Teuwen DE, Sylvia S. Market competition and demand for skills in a credence goods market: Evidence from face-to-face and web-based non-physician clinician training in rural China. PloS one. 2020;15:e0233955.Abstract
Background Non-physician clinicians (NPCs) providing services in functionally private markets account for a large share of the workforce in the primary care system in many low-income and middle-income countries. Although regular in-service training is believed to be crucial to updating NPCs’ professional knowledge, skills, and practices, participation rates are often low. Low participation may result from the “credence good” nature of the market for primary care: if patients are unable to observe quality improvements from training, NPCs have weaker incentives to participate. Empirical evidence is limited on the relationship between market competition and NPC participation in-service training as well as how participation varies with the type of training available. Methods The study uses a dataset of 301 NPCs from three prefectures in Yunnan, a province in southwest China, collected in July 2017. Logistic regression is used to estimate the relationship between competition and NPC’s participation in in-service training. We assess the relationship between participation and both the quantity of competition (number of competitors in the same village and surrounding villages) and the quality of competition (proxied using characteristics of competing clinicians). Results In 2016, nearly two thirds of NPCs participated in face-to-face or web-based in-service trainings at least once. Specifically, 58 percent of NPCs participated in face-to-face in-service trainings, and 24 percent of NPCs participated in web-based in-service trainings. The quantity of competitors is unrelated to participation in in-service training. The quality of competition is not related to face-to-face training but has a significant positive relationship with participation in web-based training. Conclusions Web-based trainings may be a better approach to increase NPC skills in developing country primary care markets.;The study uses a dataset of 301 NPCs from three prefectures in Yunnan, a province in southwest China, collected in July 2017. Logistic regression is used to estimate the relationship between competition and NPC's participation in in-service training. We assess the relationship between participation and both the quantity of competition (number of competitors in the same village and surrounding villages) and the quality of competition (proxied using characteristics of competing clinicians). In 2016, nearly two thirds of NPCs participated in face-to-face or web-based in-service trainings at least once. Specifically, 58 percent of NPCs participated in face-to-face in-service trainings, and 24 percent of NPCs participated in web-based in-service trainings. The quantity of competitors is unrelated to participation in in-service training. The quality of competition is not related to face-to-face training but has a significant positive relationship with participation in web-based training. Web-based trainings may be a better approach to increase NPC skills in developing country primary care markets.;