Data-driven quality improvement in low-and middle-income country health systems: lessons from seven years of implementation experience across Mozambique, Rwanda, and Zambia

被引:74
作者
Wagenaar, Bradley H. [1 ,2 ]
Hirschhorn, Lisa R. [3 ,4 ]
Henley, Catherine [1 ,2 ]
Gremu, Artur [5 ]
Sindano, Ntazana [6 ]
Chilengi, Roma [6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Global Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth, 1959 NE Pacific St, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Hlth Alliance Int, Seattle, WA 98105 USA
[3] Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
[4] Partners Hlth, Kigali, Rwanda
[5] Hlth Alliance Int, Beira, Mozambique
[6] Ctr Infect Dis Res Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia
[7] Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC USA
关键词
Quality improvement; Low income; Health systems research; Health systems strengthening; Data assessment; Decision making; Maternal and child health; Rwanda; Mozambique; Zambia; DECISION-MAKING; PUBLIC-HEALTH; MANAGEMENT; INTERVENTION; INFORMATION; BARRIERS;
D O I
10.1186/s12913-017-2661-x
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Well-functioning health systems need to utilize data at all levels, from the provider, to local and national-level decision makers, in order to make evidence-based and needed adjustments to improve the quality of care provided. Over the last 7 years, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation's African Health Initiative funded health systems strengthening projects at the facility, district, and/or provincial level to improve population health. Increasing data-driven decision making was a common strategy in Mozambique, Rwanda and Zambia. This paper describes the similar and divergent approaches to increase data-driven quality of care improvements (QI) and implementation challenge and opportunities encountered in these three countries. Methods: Eight semi-structured in-depth interviews (IDIs) were administered to program staff working in each country. IDIs for this paper included principal investigators of each project, key program implementers (medically-trained support staff, data managers and statisticians, and country directors), as well as Ministry of Health counterparts. IDI data were collected through field notes; interviews were not audio recorded. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis but no systematic coding was conducted. IDIs were supplemented through donor report abstractions, a structured questionnaire, one-on-one phone calls, and email exchanges with country program leaders to clarify and expand on key themes emerging from IDIs. Results: Project successes ranged from over 450 collaborative action-plans developed, implemented, and evaluated in Mozambique, to an increase from <10% to >80% of basic clinical protocols followed in intervention facilities in rural Zambia, and a shift from a lack of awareness of health data among health system staff to collaborative ownership of data and using data to drive change in Rwanda. Conclusion: Based on common successes across the country experiences, we recommend future data-driven QI interventions begin with data quality assessments to promote that rapid health system improvement is possible, ensure confidence in available data, serve as the first step in data-driven targeted improvements, and improve staff data analysis and visualization skills. Explicit Ministry of Health collaborative engagement can ensure performance review is collaborative and internally-driven rather than viewed as an external "audit."
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   Evidence based practice in population health: a regional survey to inform workforce development and organisational change [J].
Adily, A ;
Ward, J .
JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2004, 58 (06) :455-460
[2]   Assessing and improving data quality from community health workers: a successful intervention in Neno, Malawi [J].
Admon, A. J. ;
Bazile, J. ;
Makungwa, H. ;
Chingoli, M. A. ;
Hirschhorn, L. R. ;
Peckarsky, M. ;
Rigodon, J. ;
Herce, M. ;
Chingoli, F. ;
Malani, P. N. ;
Hedt-Gauthier, B. L. .
PUBLIC HEALTH ACTION, 2013, 3 (01) :56-59
[3]   Nurse mentorship to improve the quality of health care delivery in rural Rwanda [J].
Anatole, Manzi ;
Magge, Hema ;
Redditt, Vanessa ;
Karamaga, Adolphe ;
Niyonzima, Saleh ;
Drobac, Peter ;
Mukherjee, Joia S. ;
Ntaganira, Joseph ;
Nyirazinyoye, Laetitia ;
Hirschhorn, Lisa R. .
NURSING OUTLOOK, 2013, 61 (03) :137-144
[4]  
[Anonymous], BMC HLTH SERVICES S3
[5]  
[Anonymous], BMC HLTH SERVICES S3
[6]   Integration of targeted health interventions into health systems: a conceptual framework for analysis [J].
Atun, Rifat ;
de Jongh, Thyra ;
Secci, Federica ;
Ohiri, Kelechi ;
Adeyi, Olusoji .
HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2010, 25 (02) :104-111
[7]   What is "quality improvement" and how can it transform healthcare? [J].
Batalden, Paul B. ;
Davidoff, Frank .
QUALITY & SAFETY IN HEALTH CARE, 2007, 16 (01) :2-3
[8]  
Berwick D.M., 1990, CURING HLTH CARE
[9]  
Braa J, 2012, B WORLD HEALTH ORGAN, V90, P379, DOI [10.2471/BLT.11.99580, 10.2471/BLT.11.099580]
[10]   Improvement Interventions Are Social Treatments, Not Pills [J].
Davidoff, Frank .
ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2014, 161 (07) :526-527