Osler Meg, Hilderbrand Katherine, Hennessey Claudine, Arendse Juanita, Goemaere Eric, Ford Nathan, Boulle Andrew
Centre for Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology and Research, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa;
Centre for Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology and Research, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa; Médecins Sans Frontières, Southern African Medical Unit, Cape Town, South Africa.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2014 Apr 28;17(1):18908. doi: 10.7448/IAS.17.1.18908. eCollection 2014.
The provision of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in low and middle-income countries is a chronic disease intervention of unprecedented magnitude and is the dominant health systems challenge for high-burden countries, many of which rank among the poorest in the world. Substantial external investment, together with the requirement for service evolution to adapt to changing needs, including the constant shift to earlier ART initiation, makes outcome monitoring and reporting particularly important. However, there is growing concern at the inability of many high-burden countries to report on the outcomes of patients who have been in care for various durations, or even the number of patients in care at a particular point in time. In many instances, countries can only report on the number of patients ever started on ART. Despite paper register systems coming under increasing strain, the evolution from paper directly to complex electronic medical record solutions is not viable in many contexts. Implementing a bridging solution, such as a simple offline electronic version of the paper register, can be a pragmatic alternative. This paper describes and recommends a three-tiered monitoring approach in low- and middle-income countries based on the experience implementing such a system in the Western Cape province of South Africa. A three-tier approach allows Ministries of Health to strategically implement one of the tiers in each facility offering ART services. Each tier produces the same nationally required monthly enrolment and quarterly cohort reports so that outputs from the three tiers can be aggregated into a single database at any level of the health system. The choice of tier is based on context and resources at the time of implementation. As resources and infrastructure improve, more facilities will transition to the next highest and more technologically sophisticated tier. Implementing a three-tier monitoring system at country level for pre-antiretroviral wellness, ART, tuberculosis and mother and child health services can be an efficient approach to ensuring system-wide harmonization and accurate monitoring of services, including long term retention in care, during the scale-up of electronic monitoring solutions.
在低收入和中等收入国家提供抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)是一项规模空前的慢性病干预措施,也是高负担国家卫生系统面临的主要挑战,其中许多国家位列世界最贫穷国家。大量外部投资,以及服务不断演变以适应不断变化的需求(包括持续向更早开始抗逆转录病毒疗法转变),使得结果监测和报告尤为重要。然而,许多高负担国家无法报告接受不同时长治疗的患者的治疗结果,甚至无法报告特定时间点接受治疗的患者数量,这一问题日益受到关注。在许多情况下,各国只能报告开始接受抗逆转录病毒疗法的患者数量。尽管纸质登记系统面临的压力越来越大,但在许多情况下,直接从纸质系统过渡到复杂的电子病历解决方案并不可行。实施一种过渡性解决方案,例如纸质登记册的简单离线电子版本,可能是一种务实的选择。本文基于在南非西开普省实施此类系统的经验,描述并推荐了一种低收入和中等收入国家的三层监测方法。三层方法使各国卫生部能够在每个提供抗逆转录病毒疗法服务的机构有策略地实施其中一层。每一层都会生成国家要求的相同月度登记报告和季度队列报告,以便这三层的产出可以在卫生系统的任何层面汇总到一个单一数据库中。层级的选择基于实施时的具体情况和资源。随着资源和基础设施的改善,更多机构将过渡到更高一级且技术更复杂的层级。在国家层面为抗逆转录病毒治疗前健康状况、抗逆转录病毒疗法、结核病以及母婴健康服务实施三层监测系统,可能是一种有效的方法,可确保在扩大电子监测解决方案规模的过程中,实现全系统的协调一致以及对服务进行准确监测,包括长期治疗留存情况。