Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, E5541, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
National Statistical Office, Zomba, Malawi.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Mar 17;20(1):221. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-5066-1.
To effectively deliver on proposed objectives, it is vital that practitioners, policymakers, and other stakeholders are able to clearly understand how strongly their large-scale program is being implemented. This study sought to test the feasibility, cost-effectiveness, and validity of a phone-based method as an innovative and cost-efficient approach to assessing program implementation strength (through an Implementation Strength Assessment - ISA), alternative to the traditional in-person field methods.
We conducted 701 mobile phone and 356 in-person interviews with facility in-Charges and two types of community health workers who provide family planning services in the Dowa and Ntcheu districts in Malawi. Responses received via the phone interview were validated through in-person review of records and inspections. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated to determine validity.
Most indicators at the health facility and community health worker levels were above a 70% threshold for sensitivity. However, there were fewer indicators that met this threshold for specificity. The primary reason for lower specificity was due to poor recordkeeping. Collecting data via mobile phone was found to be feasible and twice as cost-efficient as collecting the same data via in-person inspections.
The rapid increase in mobile phone ownership and network availability in lower income countries could offer an alternative, cost-effective avenue to collect data for a better understanding of program implementation. Through rigorous assessment, this study found that using mobile phones could be a low-cost alternative to collect data on health system delivery of services, especially in places where routine data quality is poor and traditional, in-person methods are costly.
为了有效地实现既定目标,从业者、政策制定者和其他利益相关者能够清楚地了解他们的大型项目实施力度至关重要。本研究旨在测试基于电话的方法作为评估项目实施力度(通过实施力度评估,ISA)的创新且具有成本效益的方法的可行性、成本效益和有效性,以替代传统的现场方法。
我们在马拉维的多瓦和恩彻乌地区对医疗机构负责人和两种提供计划生育服务的社区卫生工作者进行了 701 次手机访谈和 356 次现场访谈。通过电话访谈收到的回复通过对记录和检查的现场审查进行了验证。计算了敏感性和特异性来确定有效性。
大多数在卫生机构和社区卫生工作者层面的指标的敏感性都超过了 70%的阈值。但是,特异性符合该阈值的指标较少。特异性较低的主要原因是记录保存不善。通过手机收集数据被发现是可行的,并且比通过现场检查收集相同数据的成本效率高两倍。
在低收入国家,移动电话拥有量和网络可用性的迅速增加为更好地了解项目实施情况提供了一种替代的、具有成本效益的收集数据的方法。通过严格评估,本研究发现,使用手机可以作为一种低成本的替代方法,收集有关卫生系统提供服务的数据,特别是在常规数据质量较差且传统的现场方法成本较高的地方。