Health Services Unit, KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya
Oxford Centre for Global Health Research, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, Oxford, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Mar;6(3). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005300.
We have worked to develop a Clinical Information Network (CIN) in Kenya as an early form of learning health systems (LHS) focused on paediatric and neonatal care that now spans 22 hospitals. CIN's aim was to examine important outcomes of hospitalisation at scale, identify and ultimately solve practical problems of service delivery, drive improvements in quality and test interventions. By including multiple routine settings in research, we aimed to promote generalisability of findings and demonstrate potential efficiencies derived from LHS. We illustrate the nature and range of research CIN has supported over the past 7 years as a form of LHS. Clinically, this has largely focused on common, serious paediatric illnesses such as pneumonia, malaria and diarrhoea with dehydration with recent extensions to neonatal illnesses. CIN also enables examination of the quality of care, for example that provided to children with severe malnutrition and the challenges encountered in routine settings in adopting simple technologies (pulse oximetry) and more advanced diagnostics (eg, Xpert MTB/RIF). Although regular feedback to hospitals has been associated with some improvements in quality data continue to highlight system challenges that undermine provision of basic, quality care (eg, poor access to blood glucose testing and routine microbiology). These challenges include those associated with increased mortality risk (eg, delays in blood transfusion). Using the same data the CIN platform has enabled conduct of randomised trials and supports malaria vaccine and most recently COVID-19 surveillance. Employing LHS principles has meant engaging front-line workers, clinical managers and national stakeholders throughout. Our experience suggests LHS can be developed in low and middle-income countries that efficiently enable contextually appropriate research and contribute to strengthening of health services and research systems.
我们致力于在肯尼亚开发一个临床信息网络(CIN),作为一种早期的学习型卫生系统(LHS),专注于儿科和新生儿护理,现已覆盖 22 家医院。CIN 的目标是大规模检查住院的重要结果,识别并最终解决服务提供方面的实际问题,推动质量改进,并测试干预措施。通过在研究中纳入多个常规环境,我们旨在促进研究结果的推广,并展示学习型卫生系统带来的潜在效率。我们展示了过去 7 年来 CIN 作为一种 LHS 所支持的研究的性质和范围。从临床角度来看,这主要集中在常见的严重儿科疾病上,如肺炎、疟疾和腹泻伴脱水,最近扩展到新生儿疾病。CIN 还能够检查护理质量,例如为严重营养不良的儿童提供的护理,以及在常规环境中采用简单技术(脉搏血氧仪)和更先进的诊断方法(如 Xpert MTB/RIF)所面临的挑战。尽管定期向医院提供反馈已经与一些质量改进相关,但数据仍然突出了系统挑战,这些挑战破坏了基本优质护理的提供(例如,血糖测试和常规微生物学的获取有限)。这些挑战包括与增加死亡率风险相关的挑战(例如,输血延迟)。利用相同的数据,CIN 平台已经能够进行随机试验,并支持疟疾疫苗,最近还支持 COVID-19 监测。采用 LHS 原则意味着在整个过程中都要让一线工作人员、临床管理人员和国家利益相关者参与进来。我们的经验表明,学习型卫生系统可以在中低收入国家发展起来,能够有效地进行与当地情况相适应的研究,并有助于加强卫生服务和研究系统。