Funders
OUCRU PhD scholarship
University of Western Australia
University of South Hampton
Principal Investigator
Lenny L. Ekawati
Location
Alor district, East Nusa Tenggara
This project collaborates with two local community health facilities and the district health office.
Acute fever is a symptom of illness most often associated with an infectious disease occurrence, sometimes leading to admission to clinics or hospitals. However, as diagnostic tests are not widely available, diagnosis of the cause of fever is commonly based on clinical judgement without laboratory confirmation. Patient judgement of that illness is also involved in its outcome, deferring the seeking of treatment until deciding that attention is needed.
Consequently, patients may become very ill before being seen at the clinic and receive inadequate or improper treatment for an infection of unknown identity. Patient judgement of the need for care with a febrile illness may hinge upon the difficulty of obtaining that care. Understanding distance to care and illness triggers to seeking care may aid in delivery strategies that may more effectively curb death due to acute febrile illnesses.
This research aims to assess the impact of distance to healthcare on the threshold of illness and its role in triggering the seeking of medical assistance for febrile illness at an isolated and impoverished site in eastern Indonesia. Although distance is understood as a geographical and socioeconomic determinant of healthcare-seeking decisions and illness outcomes, no studies in Indonesia have yet examined thresholds of illness prompting the decision to seek medical assistance with respect to distances needed to cross.
This study involves