JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc., Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Population Council, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMC Pediatr. 2024 Sep 21;24(1):599. doi: 10.1186/s12887-024-05070-w.
Sepsis is a leading cause of neonatal mortality, despite the availability of effective treatment of possible serious bacterial illness (PSBI), including when referral to a hospital is not feasible. Gaps in access and delivery worsened during COVID-19. We conducted embedded implementation research in Ethiopia and Kenya aimed at mitigating the impact of COVID-19 and addressing various implementation challenges to improve PSBI management.
The implementation research projects were implemented at the subnational level in Ethiopia and Kenya between November 2020-June 2022 (Ethiopia) and December 2020-August 2022 (Kenya). Guided by the implementation research frameworks, both projects conducted mixed formative quantitative and exploratory research from April to May 2021, followed by summative evaluations conducted between June and July 2022. Frameworks encompassed Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM), as well as health systems framework that incorporates cascades of care and World Health Organization Health Systems Building Blocks. Results were synthesized across the projects through document review and sharing cross-project measures and strategies through a project community of practice.
Despite differences in settings across the projects, cross-cutting facilitators included community health worker program and support, and existence of guidelines for PSBI management at primary care levels. Barriers included community attitudes towards seeking care for sick newborns, COVID-19 risks and fear, and lack of health care worker competence. Country-specific contextual barriers included supply chain issues, civil conflict (Ethiopia), and labor strikes (Kenya). Strategies chosen to mitigate barriers and support implementation and sustainability in both settings included leveraging community health workers to address resistance to care-seeking, health workers' training, COVID-19 infection prevention measures, stakeholder engagement, and advocacy to integrate PSBI management into existing programs, policies, and training. Other strategies addressing emerging project-specific barriers, included improving follow-up through a community health desk and PSBI mobile app (Kenya) and supply chain strengthening (Ethiopia). Both projects improved PSBI management coverage, increased adoption and uptake, and informed national policy changes supporting potential for sustainability.
Pragmatic embedded implementation research effectively supports the identification of barriers and mapping to strategies designed to increase effective coverage of PSBI management when referral is not feasible during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite differences in context, cross-cutting strategies identified could inform broader scale-up in the region, including during future health system shocks.
尽管有针对可能严重细菌感染(PSBI)的有效治疗方法,包括在无法转诊到医院的情况下,败血症仍然是新生儿死亡的主要原因。在 COVID-19 期间,获得和提供治疗的差距进一步扩大。我们在埃塞俄比亚和肯尼亚进行了嵌入式实施研究,旨在减轻 COVID-19 的影响,并解决各种实施挑战,以改善 PSBI 管理。
实施研究项目于 2020 年 11 月至 2022 年 6 月(埃塞俄比亚)和 2020 年 12 月至 2022 年 8 月(肯尼亚)在国家以下一级实施。两个项目均在实施研究框架的指导下,于 2021 年 4 月至 5 月进行了混合形式的定量和探索性研究,然后于 2022 年 6 月至 7 月进行了总结性评估。框架包括实施研究综合框架(CFIR)、范围、有效性、采用、实施和维护(RE-AIM),以及包含护理级联和世界卫生组织卫生系统构建模块的卫生系统框架。通过文件审查和通过实践社区共享跨项目措施和策略,对项目进行综合评估。
尽管两个项目的背景不同,但跨领域的促进因素包括社区卫生工作者计划和支持,以及初级保健水平 PSBI 管理指南的存在。障碍包括社区对照顾生病新生儿的态度、对 COVID-19 的风险和恐惧,以及卫生工作者能力的缺乏。特定于国家的背景障碍包括供应链问题、内战(埃塞俄比亚)和劳工罢工(肯尼亚)。在这两个环境中选择的策略包括利用社区卫生工作者来解决对寻求护理的抵制、对卫生工作者的培训、COVID-19 感染预防措施、利益相关者的参与以及倡导将 PSBI 管理纳入现有方案、政策和培训,以减轻障碍并支持实施和可持续性。其他针对新出现的项目特定障碍的策略包括通过社区卫生服务台和 PSBI 移动应用程序(肯尼亚)改善后续行动,并加强供应链(埃塞俄比亚)。两个项目都提高了 PSBI 管理的覆盖率,增加了采用和采用率,并为支持潜在可持续性的国家政策变化提供了信息。
实用的嵌入式实施研究有效地支持了在 COVID-19 大流行期间无法转诊时,确定障碍并制定旨在增加 PSBI 管理有效覆盖范围的策略,以支持识别障碍和制定策略。尽管背景不同,但确定的跨领域策略可以为该地区更广泛的扩展提供信息,包括在未来的卫生系统冲击期间。