Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Department of Public Health and Leadership, Divine Word University, P O Box 483, Madang Province, Papua New Guinea.
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Department of Medicine, Divine Word University, P O Box 483, Madang Province, Papua New Guinea.
Antimicrob Resist Infect Control. 2023 Apr 12;12(1):31. doi: 10.1186/s13756-023-01237-9.
Papua New Guinea (PNG) is one of the 14 countries categorised as having a triple burden of tuberculosis (TB), multidrug-resistant TB (MDR TB), and TB-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infections. TB infection prevention and control (TB-IPC) guidelines were introduced in 2011 by the National Health Department of PNG. This study assesses the implementation of this policy in a sample of district hospitals in two regions of PNG.
The implementation of TB-IPC policy was assessed using a survey method based on the World Health Organization (WHO) IPC assessment framework (IPCAF) to implement the WHO's IPC core components. The study included facility assessment at ten district hospitals and validation observations of TB-IPC practices.
Overall, implementation of IPC and TB-IPC guidelines was inadequate in participating facilities. Though 80% of facilities had an IPC program, many needed more clearly defined IPC objectives, budget allocation, and yearly work plans. In addition, they did not include senior facility managers in the IPC committee. 80% (n = 8 of 10) of hospitals had no IPC training and education; 90% had no IPC committee to support the IPC team; 70% had no surveillance protocols to monitor infections, and only 20% used multimodal strategies for IPC activities. Similarly, 70% of facilities had a TB-IPC program without a proper budget and did not include facility managers in the TB-IPC team; 80% indicated that patient flow poses a risk of TB transmission; 70% had poor ventilation systems; 90% had inadequate isolation rooms; and though 80% have personal protective equipment available, frequent shortages were reported.
The WHO-recommended TB-IPC policy is not effectively implemented in most of the participating district hospitals. Improvements in implementing and disseminating TB-IPC guidelines, monitoring TB-IPC practices, and systematic healthcare worker training are essential to improve TB-IPC guidelines' operationalisation in health settings to reduce TB prevalence in PNG.
巴布亚新几内亚(PNG)是 14 个同时存在结核病(TB)、耐多药结核病(MDR TB)和结核病-人类免疫缺陷病毒(TB-HIV)合并感染三重负担的国家之一。2011 年,国家卫生部在 PNG 推出了结核病感染预防与控制(TB-IPC)指南。本研究评估了该政策在 PNG 两个地区的部分地区医院的实施情况。
采用世界卫生组织(WHO)IPC 评估框架(IPCAF)基础上的调查方法,评估 TB-IPC 政策的实施情况,以实施世卫组织的 IPC 核心要素。该研究包括对十个地区医院的设施评估和对 TB-IPC 实践的验证观察。
总体而言,参与医院的 IPC 和 TB-IPC 指南的实施情况不足。尽管 80%的设施有 IPC 方案,但许多方案需要更明确的 IPC 目标、预算分配和年度工作计划。此外,他们没有让高级设施管理人员参与 IPC 委员会。80%(n=10 中的 8)的医院没有 IPC 培训和教育;90%的医院没有 IPC 委员会来支持 IPC 团队;70%的医院没有监测感染的监测协议,只有 20%的医院使用多模式策略来开展 IPC 活动。同样,70%的医院有 TB-IPC 方案,但没有适当的预算,也没有让设施管理人员参与 TB-IPC 团队;80%的医院表示患者流量存在 TB 传播风险;70%的医院通风系统较差;90%的医院隔离室不足;虽然 80%的医院有个人防护设备,但经常报告短缺。
世卫组织推荐的 TB-IPC 政策在大多数参与的地区医院并未得到有效实施。改进 TB-IPC 指南的实施和传播、监测 TB-IPC 实践以及系统的医护人员培训,对于在卫生环境中实施 TB-IPC 指南以降低 PNG 的 TB 患病率至关重要。