# Household healthcare seeking patterns for emergent ill-health in Migori, Western Kenya

**Authors:** Zachary A. Kwena, Elizabeth A. Bukusi, Chanda Mwamba, Norton M. Sang, Felix O. Okoth, Jennifer F. Morton, Anna Winters, Derek Pollard, Alastair Van Heerden, Hilton Humphries, Dino Rech, Meagan Bemer, Shawna Cooper, Anjali Sharma, Paul K. Drain

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1658217 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2025-11-10

## TL;DR

This study explores how households in Western Kenya decide where to seek care for sudden illnesses, influenced by community norms, access to services, and perceived illness severity.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into healthcare-seeking behaviors in a Kenyan context using the Andersen Expanded Behavioral Model.

## Key findings

- Households often use home remedies and local pharmacies due to poor hospital services and long waiting times.
- Perceived illness severity and affected household member influence the urgency and type of care sought.
- Financial barriers and lack of health insurance hinder timely access to formal healthcare facilities.

## Abstract

Healthcare-seeking decisions reflect personal assessments of illness etiology and severity to determine whether, how, and where to seek care. Understanding these contexts enables targeted interventions to address barriers and ensure timely access to quality services. We examined patterns of household healthcare seeking for emergent ill-health in Western Kenya.

As part of a multi-site mixed-methods study evaluating a patient-centered, digitally-facilitated self-testing intervention, we analyzed 16 in-depth interviews and two focus group discussions (n = 14) in Migori County, Kenya. Guided by the Andersen Expanded Behavioral Model, we explored psychosocial, enabling, and need factors influencing household decisions.

We found that a complex interplay of psychosocial, enabling, and need factors determined if, when, and where households sought care for ill members. Psychosocial influences included prevailing community norms that favored home remedies and self-medication prior to formal care as in the quote below: ‘we will start with home remedy, then to self-medication, then we will start looking for those healers…'. Enabling factors, particularly long waiting times, poor service quality, and lack of transport, discouraged timely facility use, leading households to rely on local pharmacies or alternative providers as reported by this participant ‘When you come here [hospital], you will stay for too long, and then… you will be sent to the chemist to buy medication. So, I am taking the cheaper route, I just go to the chemist [pharmacy] direct I take the medicine…' Distance to facilities, financial barriers, and lack of health insurance compromise care-seeking. Need-related considerations, especially perceived illness severity, attribution of cause, and the identity of the affected household member (with children prioritized), determined the urgency and type of care sought as illustrated in the quote ‘There are some infections that you do not go to the hospital and some that you have to go to the hospital. So, it depends on the disease you have'.

Household healthcare-seeking decisions were shaped by a dynamic interplay of psychosocial, enabling, and need factors. Addressing these multifaceted barriers through targeted, context-specific interventions, such as enhancing health infrastructure and integrating different providers, is crucial to ensuring timely access to quality healthcare.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** emergent ill-health (MESH:D004630), infections (MESH:D007239)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12640822/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12640822