Jennings Larissa, Bertrand Jane, Rech Dino, Harvey Steven A, Hatzold Karin, Samkange Christopher A, Omondi Aduda Dickens S, Fimbo Bennett, Cherutich Peter, Perry Linnea, Castor Delivette, Njeuhmeli Emmanuel
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Department of Global Health Systems and Development, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 May 6;9(5):e79524. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079524. eCollection 2014.
The rapid expansion of voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) has raised concerns whether health systems can deliver and sustain VMMC according to minimum quality criteria.
A comparative process evaluation was used to examine data from SYMMACS, the Systematic Monitoring of the Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision Scale-Up, among health facilities providing VMMC across two years of program scale-up. Site-level assessments examined the availability of guidelines, supplies and equipment, infection control, and continuity of care services. Direct observation of VMMC surgeries were used to assess care quality. Two sample tests of proportions and t-tests were used to examine differences in the percent of facilities meeting requisite preparedness standards and the mean number of directly-observed surgical tasks performed correctly. Results showed that safe, high quality VMMC can be implemented and sustained at-scale, although substantial variability was observed over time. In some settings, facility preparedness and VMMC service quality improved as the number of VMMC facilities increased. Yet, lapses in high performance and expansion of considerably deficient services were also observed. Surgical tasks had the highest quality scores, with lower performance levels in infection control, pre-operative examinations, and post-operative patient monitoring and counseling. The range of scale-up models used across countries additionally underscored the complexity of delivering high quality VMMC.
Greater efforts are needed to integrate VMMC scale-up and quality improvement processes in sub-Saharan African settings. Monitoring of service quality, not just adverse events reporting, will be essential in realizing the full health impact of VMMC for HIV prevention.
自愿男性医学包皮环切术(VMMC)的迅速推广引发了人们对卫生系统能否按照最低质量标准提供并维持VMMC服务的担忧。
采用了一项比较性过程评估,以审查来自SYMMACS(自愿男性医学包皮环切术扩大规模系统监测)的数据,该数据来自在项目扩大规模的两年中提供VMMC服务的医疗机构。机构层面的评估考察了指南、用品和设备的可用性、感染控制以及护理服务的连续性。通过直接观察VMMC手术来评估护理质量。使用比例的双样本检验和t检验来检查达到必要准备标准的机构百分比以及正确执行的直接观察到的手术任务平均数量的差异。结果表明,安全、高质量的VMMC可以大规模实施并维持,尽管随着时间推移观察到了很大的变异性。在某些情况下,随着VMMC机构数量的增加,机构准备情况和VMMC服务质量有所改善。然而,也观察到了高性能方面的失误以及严重不足服务的扩大。手术任务的质量得分最高,而在感染控制、术前检查以及术后患者监测和咨询方面的表现水平较低。各国使用的扩大规模模式范围进一步凸显了提供高质量VMMC的复杂性。
在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,需要做出更大努力,将VMMC扩大规模和质量改进过程整合起来。监测服务质量,而不仅仅是报告不良事件,对于实现VMMC对预防艾滋病毒的全面健康影响至关重要。