Malaria Public Health Cluster, KEMRI-Wellcome Trust-University of Oxford Collaborative Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e54066. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054066. Epub 2013 Jan 17.
Health facility stock-outs of life saving malaria medicines are common across Africa. Innovative ways of addressing this problem are urgently required. We evaluated whether SMS based reporting of stocks of artemether-lumefantrine (AL) and rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) can result in reduction of stock-outs at peripheral facilities in Kenya.
METHODS/FINDINGS: All 87 public health facilities in five Kenyan districts were included in a 26 week project. Weekly facility stock counts of four AL packs and RDTs were sent via structured incentivized SMS communication process from health workers' personal mobile phones to a web-based system accessed by district managers. The mean health facility response rate was 97% with a mean formatting error rate of 3%. Accuracy of stock count reports was 79% while accuracy of stock-out reports was 93%. District managers accessed the system 1,037 times at an average of eight times per week. The system was accessed in 82% of the study weeks. Comparing weeks 1 and 26, stock-out of one or more AL packs declined by 38 percentage-points. Total AL stock-out declined by 5 percentage-points and was eliminated by the end of the project. Stock-out declines of individual AL packs ranged from 14 to 32 percentage-points while decline in RDT stock-outs was 24 percentage-points. District managers responded to 44% of AL and 73% of RDT stock-out signals by redistributing commodities between facilities. In comparison with national trends, stock-out declines in study areas were greater, sharper and more sustained.
Use of simple SMS technology ensured high reporting rates of reasonably accurate, real-time facility stock data that were used by district managers to undertake corrective actions to reduce stock-outs. Future work on stock monitoring via SMS should focus on assessing response rates without use of incentives and demonstrating effectiveness of such interventions on a larger scale.
在整个非洲,救命的抗疟药品在卫生机构经常出现缺货。迫切需要创新的方法来解决这个问题。我们评估了基于短信报告青蒿素-本芴醇(AL)和快速诊断检测试剂(RDT)库存的方法是否能减少肯尼亚周边医疗机构的缺货现象。
方法/发现:本研究包括肯尼亚五个地区的 87 家公共卫生机构,为期 26 周。来自卫生工作者个人手机的结构化激励短信通信流程每周向一个基于网络的系统发送四次 AL 包和 RDT 的库存计数。平均卫生机构响应率为 97%,平均格式错误率为 3%。库存计数报告的准确率为 79%,而缺货报告的准确率为 93%。地区经理平均每周访问该系统八次,共访问 1037 次。该系统在 82%的研究周内被访问。比较第 1 周和第 26 周,一种或多种 AL 包的缺货减少了 38 个百分点。AL 的总缺货减少了 5 个百分点,并在项目结束时消除。个别 AL 包的缺货减少幅度从 14%到 32%不等,而 RDT 缺货减少了 24 个百分点。地区经理对 44%的 AL 和 73%的 RDT 缺货信号做出了反应,通过在医疗机构之间重新分配商品来应对。与全国趋势相比,研究地区的缺货减少幅度更大、更迅速且更持续。
使用简单的短信技术确保了相当准确、实时的库存数据的高报告率,地区经理利用这些数据采取纠正措施来减少缺货。未来通过短信进行库存监测的工作应重点评估不使用激励措施的响应率,并在更大范围内展示此类干预措施的有效性。