West Afr J Med. 2024 Jan 31;41(1):16-24.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Studies on healthcare professionals’ knowledge about the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) are scarce. Therefore, we assessed the knowledge and practice of the NHIS referral system among Medical and Dental practitioners in a tertiary hospital in Northwest Nigeria.
METHODS: This cross-sectional study involved 242 medical and dental practitioners randomly selected from nine departments for over 6-weeks. A structured self-administered questionnaire was used to collect data. Data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics.
RESULTS: The respondents’ mean age was 35.7±6.0 years; they were predominantly males (64.9%). Their mean overall knowledge score was 58.9±23.0%, with 66.9% of respondents having inadequate overall knowledge of the NHIS referral system. Practice department (Fishers 2 exact, P=0.0019), perceived knowledge of the referral system (ꭓ =8.169, P=0.004), and having been referred as an enrolee (ꭓ2 = 6.358, P=0.012) were associated with overall-knowledge. Obstetrics-and-Gynaecology (odds ratio[OR]=0.29, 95% confident interval [CI] [0.88-0.98]), Dental and-Maxillofacial-Surgery (OR=0.08, 95%CI[0.01-0.98]), and Otorhinolaryngology (OR=0.18, 95%CI[0.04-0.80]) respondents were less likely to have adequate overall-knowledge.Although 56.2%, 50.4%, 20.7%, and 89.7% were enrolees, had received treatment as enrolees, had been referred as enrolees and treated other enrolees, respectively, an unimpressive proportion had sighted a referral letter (64.9%) or authorization code on the letter (25.2%), referred an enrolee from their department previously (51.2%) or used the NHIS referral form to write referrals (38.8%).
CONCLUSION: The overall knowledge of the NHIS referral system was inadequate. The practice of the referral system was below expectation. Therefore, training medical and dental practitioners on the NHIS referral system is necessary. Training should target those who are least likely to have adequate overall knowledge.
PMID:38412015