College of Health Sciences, School of Public Health, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Implement Sci. 2017 Jul 18;12(1):89. doi: 10.1186/s13012-017-0604-x.
Quality improvement is a recommended strategy to improve implementation levels for evidence-based essential interventions, but experience of and evidence for its effects in low-resource settings are limited. We hypothesised that a systemic and collaborative quality improvement approach covering district, facility and community levels, supported by report cards generated through continuous household and health facility surveys, could improve the implementation levels and have a measurable population-level impact on coverage and quality of essential services.
Collaborative quality improvement teams tested self-identified strategies (change ideas) to support the implementation of essential maternal and newborn interventions recommended by the World Health Organization. In Tanzania and Uganda, we used a plausibility design to compare the changes over time in one intervention district with those in a comparison district in each country. Evaluation included indicators of process, coverage and implementation practice analysed with a difference-of-differences and a time-series approach, using data from independent continuous household and health facility surveys from 2011 to 2014. Primary outcomes for both countries were birth in health facilities, breastfeeding within 1 h after birth, oxytocin administration after birth and knowledge of danger signs for mothers and babies. Interpretation of the results considered contextual factors.
The intervention was associated with improvements on one of four primary outcomes. We observed a 26-percentage-point increase (95% CI 25-28%) in the proportion of live births where mothers received uterotonics within 1 min after birth in the intervention compared to the comparison district in Tanzania and an 8-percentage-point increase (95% CI 6-9%) in Uganda. The other primary indicators showed no evidence of improvement. In Tanzania, we saw positive changes for two other outcomes reflecting locally identified improvement topics. The intervention was associated with an increase in preparation of clean birth kits for home deliveries (31 percentage points, 95% CI 2-60%) and an increase in health facility supervision by district staff (14 percentage points, 95% CI 0-28%).
The systemic quality improvement approach was associated with improvements of only one of four primary outcomes, as well as two Tanzania-specific secondary outcomes. Reasons for the lack of effects included limited implementation strength as well a relatively short follow-up period in combination with a 1-year recall period for population-based estimates and a limited power of the study to detect changes smaller than 10 percentage points.
Pan African Clinical Trials Registry: PACTR201311000681314.
质量改进是提高循证基本干预措施实施水平的推荐策略,但在资源匮乏环境中的经验和证据有限。我们假设一种系统的、协作的质量改进方法,涵盖地区、设施和社区层面,通过持续的家庭和卫生机构调查生成报告卡提供支持,能够提高实施水平,并对基本服务的覆盖范围和质量产生可衡量的人群层面影响。
协作质量改进团队测试了自我确定的策略(变革思路),以支持世界卫生组织推荐的基本孕产妇和新生儿干预措施的实施。在坦桑尼亚和乌干达,我们使用似然性设计来比较每个国家干预区和对照区随时间的变化。评估包括过程指标、覆盖范围和实施实践,使用 2011 年至 2014 年独立的连续家庭和卫生机构调查数据,采用差异差异和时间序列方法进行分析。两个国家的主要结果均为在医疗机构分娩、分娩后 1 小时内母乳喂养、分娩后给予催产素以及母婴危险征象的知晓率。结果的解释考虑了背景因素。
干预与四项主要结果中的一项的改善有关。我们观察到,在坦桑尼亚,干预区在分娩后 1 分钟内母亲接受缩宫素的活产比例比对照区增加了 26 个百分点(95%CI25-28%),乌干达增加了 8 个百分点(95%CI6-9%)。其他主要指标没有改善的证据。在坦桑尼亚,我们看到了反映当地确定的改进主题的另外两个结果的积极变化。干预措施与家庭分娩用清洁分娩包的准备增加(31 个百分点,95%CI2-60%)以及地区工作人员对卫生机构的监督增加(14 个百分点,95%CI0-28%)有关。
系统的质量改进方法仅与四项主要结果中的一项以及坦桑尼亚的两项特定次要结果的改善有关。缺乏效果的原因包括实施力度有限,以及人群估计的 1 年回顾期与相对较短的随访期相结合,以及研究检测小于 10 个百分点的变化的能力有限。
泛非临床试验注册中心:PACTR201311000681314。