Can mystery patients evaluate the quality of cervical cancer screenings? A pilot study in Bolivia ¿Los pacientes misteriosos pueden evaluar la calidad de las pruebas de detección del cáncer de cuello uterino? Un estudio piloto en Bolivia

Abstract

Objective This pilot study assesses the feasibility of using mystery patients to evaluate cervical cancer screenings provided to women in rural Bolivia. Methods We developed a protocol with local officials and adapted and pre-tested a debriefing tool. Eight mystery patients with existing appointments at four purposively selected rural facilities were recruited and trained. An interviewer debriefed patients after their screenings, and entered responses into a spreadsheet for analysis. Questionnaire response frequencies and missing observations were presented. Results All patients completed screening and debriefing. On average, 93% of the questions were completed, with non-responses largely due to questions that were irrelevant to the screening venue. Responses revealed problems with confidentiality and dignity, minimal exam explanations or health education, inconsistencies across health facilities in Papanicolaou test availability, and problems in delivering and receiving test results. Conclusion Our findings suggest that the mystery patient method can be useful in evaluating the quality of cervical cancer screening and the delivery of test results in rural Bolivia.

Más información

Título según SCOPUS: Can mystery patients evaluate the quality of cervical cancer screenings? A pilot study in Bolivia ¿Los pacientes misteriosos pueden evaluar la calidad de las pruebas de detección del cáncer de cuello uterino? Un estudio piloto en Bolivia
Título de la Revista: Revista de Salud Publica
Volumen: 23
Editorial: Instituto de Salud Publica, Facultad de Medicina - Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Fecha de publicación: 2021
DOI:

10.15446/RSAP.V23N4.92654

Notas: SCOPUS