Healthcare utilisation (HU) is key to improving the health of residents in urban informal settlements. This study aimed to explore household-level factors influencing HU among informal settlement households in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Cross-sectional survey.
Three informal settlements (Cockle Bay, Dwarzark and Moyiba) in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Primary data from 4871 households were collected during the Health and Wellbeing survey conducted between April and May 2023, targeting households with adults aged 18 years and older.
The primary outcomes were households HU both within and outside informal settlements. Household-level predisposing and enabling explanatory variables were derived from Andersen’s Behavioural Model of HU.
Disability in households increases HU within settlements (especially in Dwarzark, 13% and Moyiba, 10%) but is less likely outside. Households engaged in income-generating activities are more likely to seek healthcare within settlements, but 12% less likely outside in Cockle Bay and Dwarzark. Food insecurity decreases HU within Dwarzark (9%) and increases HU outside by 174% in Moyiba. Longer water fetching times and water shortages were associated with higher HU (between 6% and 16%) within settlements, especially in Cockle Bay and Dwarzark. Clean water sources (eg, piped dwelling, bowser, surface, bottled) were consistently associated with higher HU both within and outside settlements. Shared sanitation facilities (such as shared toilets) were positively associated with HU both within and outside settlements, particularly in Dwarzark and Moyiba. Households with income from fishing, informal salaried work and bike riding showed higher HU both within and outside settlements, especially in Dwarzark and Moyiba.
We identified strong settlement-specific patterns of household-level factors that influence HU both within and outside Freetown’s informal settlements. These findings provide a foundation for developing targeted policies such as strengthening local services, addressing affordability and accessibility barriers and supporting vulnerable occupation groups.
To assess anaesthesia capacity and practice in Sierra Leone by enumerating the anaesthesia workforce by volume, training level and distribution across urban and rural areas and facility ownership; estimating the prevalence of anaesthesia methods used for common surgical procedures by provider category; and evaluating hospital infrastructure and the availability of essential anaesthesia-related medications and equipment.
A nationwide, cross-sectional, facility-based study combining structured questionnaires administered through face-to-face interviews with facility leads and retrospective review of surgical and anaesthesia logbooks.
Public and private hospitals and clinics in Sierra Leone providing surgical care with general, regional or local anaesthesia within an operating theatre.
69 of 78 eligible surgical facilities nationwide were included. Facilities providing surgical services between September 2022 and August 2023 were eligible; facilities without registries or declining participation were excluded.
Across participating facilities, the anaesthesia workforce comprised 198 full-time positions, predominantly non-physician providers, with only 40.4% (80/198) trained to administer anaesthesia independently. Ketamine-based and spinal anaesthesia were most common, while general anaesthesia with a protected airway accounted for just 5.0% (415/8339) of procedures. Anaesthesia practices varied by provider training level. Essential infrastructure, equipment and medications fell below international minimum standards, with shortages most pronounced in rural facilities.
Severe shortages of certified anaesthesia providers, limited anaesthesia techniques and inadequate material resources remain major barriers to safe anaesthesia and surgical care in Sierra Leone. Targeted investments in workforce development, infrastructure and resource allocation—particularly in rural areas—are required to improve the safety, quality and equity of anaesthesia care nationwide.