| Literature DB >> 19712484 |
Dawn M Osterholt1, Faustin Onikpo, Marcel Lama, Michael S Deming, Alexander K Rowe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is a leading cause of death among children under five years of age. The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy can improve the quality of care for pneumonia and other common illnesses in developing countries, but adherence to these guidelines could be improved. We evaluated an intervention in Benin to support health worker adherence to the guidelines after training, focusing on pneumonia case management.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19712484 PMCID: PMC2752268 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-7-77
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Figure 1Definitions of pneumonia classification and treatment categories.
Enrollment of study participants by year of survey
| 1999 (baseline) | 583 | 114 | 0/114 (0) |
| 2001 (follow-up 1) | 393 | 82 | 25/82 (30.5) |
| 2002 (follow-up 2) | 231 | 51 | 21/51 (41.2) |
| 2004 (follow-up 3) | 370 | 54 | 43/54 (79.6) |
| Total | 1577 | 301 | |
aChildren seen for an initial consultation with a "gold standard" Integrated Management of Childhood Illness classification of pneumonia whose treatment was not undefined.
Figure 2Definitions of the indicators of pneumonia case-management quality.
Predictors of pneumoniaa treatment practices of health workers trained in IMCI
| Health worker received | ||||
| | N = 28 | 15 (53.6) | 1.5 (0.6, 3.7) | |
| Usual supports | N = 42 | ref. | 19 (45.2) | ref. |
| No. supervisory visits, past 6 months (ranging from 0-4) | mean = 0.9 | -- | ||
| Consultation duration, in minutes (ranging from 5 to 131) | median = 16 | -- | --b | |
| No. of IMCI classifications | mean = 2.8 | --b | -- | |
| Health worker correctly diagnosed pneumonia | ||||
| Yes | N = 49 | 28 (68.3) | ||
| No | N = 21 | 6 (20.7) | ||
a Seventy children seen for an initial consultation with a "gold standard" IMCI classification of uncomplicated pneumonia whose treatment was not undefined (see Methods).
b Variable not retained in the multivariate model.
CI = confidence interval, OR = odds ratio, ref. = reference level
Figure 3Intention-to-treat analysis of the effect of post-training supports on recommended treatment.
Figure 4Intention-to-treat analysis of the effect of post-training supports on adequate or recommended treatment. IMCI = Integrated Management of Childhood Illness. P-value early follow-up v. baseline = 0.27. P-value late follow-up v. baseline = 0.17. P-value early follow-up v. baseline = 0.16. P-value late follow-up v. baseline = 0.66. Models are adjusted for correlation, however no confounding.
Figure 5Per-protocol analysis: effect of IMCI training plus study supports and IMCI training plus usual supports on recommended treatment predicted probabilities from adjusted model.
Figure 6Per-protocol analysis: effect of IMCI training plus study supports and IMCI training plus usual supports on "recommended or adequate" treatment, predicted probabilities from adjusted model. IMCI = Integrated Management of Childhood Illness. aModel adjusted for correlation (no confounders). P-values comparing the IMCI/study supports group with the IMCI/usual supports group were 0.15 (early follow-up versus baseline) and 0.10 (late follow-up versus baseline). P-values comparing the IMCI/usual supports group with the no-IMCI group were 0.73 (early follow-up versus baseline) and 0.29 (late follow-up versus baseline). bModel adjusted for correlation, availability of inpatient service, and severe pneumonia (the two confounders were held constant with the values no inpatient service and non-severe pneumonia). P-values comparing the IMCI/study supports group with the IMCI/usual supports group were 0.01 (early follow-up versus baseline) and 0.08 (late follow-up versus baseline). P-values comparing the IMCI/usual supports group with the no-IMCI group were 0.96 (early follow-up versus baseline) and 0.87 (late follow-up versus baseline).
Figure 7Pathway analysis in 70 cases of non-severe pneumonia treated by IMCI-trained health workers. aComplete assessment means health worker ascertained that the child had cough or difficult breathing (i.e. health worker asked for the symptom or the caretaker spontaneously offered it) and counted the child's respiratory rate.