Langston Anne C, Prosnitz Debra M, Sarriot Eric G
International Rescue Committee, New York, NY, USA.
ICF International, Washington, DC, USA.
J Health Popul Nutr. 2015 Mar;33(1):123-36.
We believe that global health practice and evaluation operate with misleading assumptions about lack of reliability of small population-based health surveys (district level and below), leading managers and decision-makers to under-use this valuable information and programmatic tool and to rely on health information from large national surveys when neither timing nor available data meet their needs. This paper uses a unique opportunity for comparison between a knowledge, practice, and coverage (KPC) household survey and Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey (RDHS) carried out in overlapping timeframes to disprove these enduring suspicions. Our analysis shows that the KPC provides coverage estimates consistent with the RDHS estimates for the same geographic areas. We discuss cases of divergence between estimates. Application of the Lives Saved Tool to the KPC results also yields child mortality estimates comparable with DHS-measured mortality. We draw three main lessons from the study and conclude with recommendations for challenging unfounded assumptions against the value of small household coverage surveys, which can be a key resource in the arsenal of local health programmers.
我们认为,全球卫生实践与评估在运作过程中存在一些误导性假设,即认为基于小范围人群(地区及以下层面)的卫生调查缺乏可靠性,这导致管理人员和决策者未能充分利用这一宝贵信息和项目工具,而是在时间和可用数据均无法满足其需求时,依赖大型全国性调查的卫生信息。本文利用了一个独特的机会,即在重叠的时间框架内对知识、实践与覆盖情况(KPC)家庭调查和卢旺达人口与健康调查(RDHS)进行比较,以反驳这些长期存在的怀疑。我们的分析表明,KPC提供的覆盖范围估计与RDHS对相同地理区域的估计一致。我们讨论了估计值之间存在差异的情况。将挽救生命工具应用于KPC的结果,也得出了与通过人口与健康调查(DHS)测量的死亡率相当的儿童死亡率估计值。我们从该研究中吸取了三个主要教训,并最后提出建议,以挑战对小型家庭覆盖范围调查价值的无端假设,这些调查可以成为地方卫生规划者武器库中的关键资源。