Waiswa Peter, O'Connell Thomas, Bagenda Danstan, Mullachery Pricila, Mpanga Flavia, Henriksson Dorcus Kiwanuka, Katahoire Anne Ruhweza, Ssegujja Eric, Mbonye Anthony K, Peterson Stefan Swartling
School of Public Health, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
Karolinska Institutet, Solna, Sweden.
Trials. 2016 Mar 11;17(1):135. doi: 10.1186/s13063-016-1241-4.
Innovative and sustainable strategies to strengthen districts and other sub-national health systems and management are urgently required to reduce child mortality. Although highly effective evidence-based and affordable child survival interventions are well-known, at the district level, lack of data, motivation, analytic and planning capacity often impedes prioritization and management weaknesses impede implementation. The Community and District Empowerment for Scale-up (CODES) project is a complex management intervention designed to test whether districts when empowered with data and management tools can prioritize and implement evidence-based child survival interventions equitably.
The CODES strategy combines management, diagnostic, and evaluation tools to identify and analyze the causes of bottlenecks to implementation, build capacity of district management teams to implement context-specific solutions, and to foster community monitoring and social accountability to increase demand for services. CODES combines UNICEF tools designed to systematize priority setting, allocation of resources and problem solving with Community dialogues based on Citizen Report Cards and U-Reports used to engage and empower communities in monitoring health service provision and to demand for quality services. Implementation and all data collection will be by the districts teams or local Community-based Organizations who will be supported by two local implementing partners. The study will be evaluated as a cluster randomized trial with eight intervention and eight comparison districts over a period of 3 years. Evaluation will focus on differences in uptake of child survival interventions and will follow an intention-to-treat analysis. We will also document and analyze experiences in implementation including changes in management practices.
By increasing the District Health Management Teams' capacity to prioritize and implement context-specific solutions, and empowering communities to become active partners in service delivery, coverage of child survival interventions will increase. Lessons learned on strengthening district-level managerial capacities and mechanisms for community monitoring may have implications, not only in Uganda but also in other similar settings, especially with regard to accelerating effective coverage of key child survival interventions using locally available resources.
ISRCTN15705788 , Date of registration; 24 July 2015.
迫切需要创新且可持续的策略来加强地区及其他国家以下层面的卫生系统与管理,以降低儿童死亡率。尽管基于证据且经济实惠的高效儿童生存干预措施广为人知,但在地区层面,数据缺失、积极性不足、分析与规划能力欠缺常常阻碍了优先事项的确定,而管理上的薄弱环节则妨碍了实施。扩大规模的社区与地区赋权(CODES)项目是一项复杂的管理干预措施,旨在检验当地区被赋予数据和管理工具时,是否能够公平地确定优先事项并实施基于证据的儿童生存干预措施。
CODES策略结合了管理、诊断和评估工具,以识别和分析实施瓶颈的原因,建设地区管理团队实施因地制宜解决方案的能力,并促进社区监督和社会问责,以增加对服务的需求。CODES将旨在使优先事项确定、资源分配和问题解决系统化的联合国儿童基金会工具与基于公民报告卡和U报告的社区对话相结合,这些工具用于让社区参与并赋权其监督卫生服务提供情况并要求提供优质服务。实施和所有数据收集将由地区团队或当地社区组织进行,他们将得到两个当地实施伙伴的支持。该研究将作为一项整群随机试验进行评估,在3年时间内选取8个干预地区和8个对照地区。评估将侧重于儿童生存干预措施采用情况的差异,并将采用意向性分析。我们还将记录和分析实施过程中的经验,包括管理实践的变化。
通过提高地区卫生管理团队确定优先事项和实施因地制宜解决方案的能力,并使社区成为服务提供中的积极伙伴,儿童生存干预措施的覆盖范围将会扩大。在加强地区层面管理能力和社区监督机制方面吸取的经验教训可能不仅对乌干达,而且对其他类似环境都有影响,特别是在利用当地可用资源加速关键儿童生存干预措施的有效覆盖方面。
ISRCTN15705788,注册日期:2015年7月24日。