| Literature DB >> 23521866 |
Basile Keugoung1, Jean Macq, Anne Buve, Jean Meli, Bart Criel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis remains a major public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. District hospitals (DHs) play a central role in district-based health systems, and their relation with vertical programmes is very important. Studies on the impact of vertical programmes on DHs are rare. This study aims to fill this gap. Its purpose is to analyse the interaction between the National Tuberculosis Control Programme (NTCP) and DHs in Cameroon, especially its effects on the human resources, routine health information system (HIS) and technical capacity at the hospital level.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23521866 PMCID: PMC3626530 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Framework for collecting data on DH performance
| Spatial dimension | Attraction zone | Interviews |
| Peripheral structures | Document review | |
| Supervision of health centres | Interviews | |
| Coordination meetings | Interviews | |
| Referral system | Interviews | |
| Managerial dimension | Resource generation | Document review, interviews, observation |
| Resource management | Interviews | |
| Management quality | Interviews | |
| Technical dimension | Staff (technical and support staff) | Document review |
| | Amenities for patients | Observation |
| | Technical equipment | |
| | Tuberculosis care indicators | Document review |
| General health care indicators | Document review |
Framework for assessing the effects of the NTCP on the human resources of DHs
| | | |
| Distribution of hospital staff in general wards and in the TDTC | Number and type of personnel recruited by the NTCP | Interviews |
| Identification of the TDTC nurse | Criteria for recruiting or identifying the TDTC staff | Interviews |
| Internal migration from general health care to tuberculosis activities | Number and type of staff dedicated to tuberculosis activities (date) | Interviews |
| Implementation of tuberculosis control activities | Type and number of staff involved in tuberculosis care | Interviews Observation |
| Role of each staff member | ||
| Staff incentives from the NTCP | Salaries provided by the NTCP | Document review Interviews |
| Type and amount of incentives related to tuberculosis activities | ||
| Provider of the incentives | ||
| | | |
| Recruitment of staff for tuberculosis control | Date and reason for change | Interviews |
| Training and supervision of staff | Type and date of training by the NTCP | Document review Interviews |
| Number and type of personnel trained or supervised | ||
| Content of the training | ||
| Competencies acquired for general health care | ||
| Supervision | Frequency | Document review Interviews Observation |
| Supervisors | ||
| Supervisees | ||
| Subject of supervision | ||
| Process of supervision | ||
| Acquisition of skills for health care delivery | For tuberculosis activities | Interviews |
| For general health care |
Framework for assessing the effects of the NTCP on the routine HIS of DHs
| Reporting system | Type of new tools introduced by the NTCP and their use | Interviews | |
| Availability of tuberculosis and routine information tools | Observation | ||
| | Designer of reporting forms | Designer of the routine information system | Interviews |
| Changes in the design of routine information after TDTC creation | |||
| | Complexity of the reporting forms | Complexity of the tuberculosis and routine information tools | Interviews |
| | Procedures | Rules for tuberculosis and routine data collection,analysis and transmission | Document review |
| Changes in routine HIS procedures following the creation of the TDTC | Interviews | ||
| Information distribution | Type of reports sent by the hospital before and after the creation of the TDTC | Interviews | |
| Services receiving hospital reports | |||
| | Interest devoted to reporting | Motivation of the TDTC staff for reporting | Interviews |
| Motivation of the ward staff members for reporting | |||
| | Quarterly HIS supervision | Staff members supervised in the use of thetuberculosis HIS (frequency) | Interviews Observation |
| Staff members supervised in the use of the routine HIS (frequency) | |||
| | Training | Training received on HIS management: trainees and date | Interviews |
| Level of knowledge of content of HIS forms | Staff members involved in monthly routine reporting | Interviews | |
| Knowledge of the content of HIS tools by hospital staff | |||
| | Skills | Skills in data collection, processing and analysis | Interviews |
| | Motivation | Level of motivation | Interviews |
| Data collection | Data completeness in registers (tuberculosis and routine care data) | Observation | |
| | Data processing | Availability of tuberculosis and routine reports(period) at the hospital level | Observation |
| | Data analysis | Type of analysis conducted on tuberculosis data and on routine data | Interviews Document review |
| | Data transmission | Availability of tuberculosis and routine reports (period)at the district and regional levels | Interviews Observation |
| | Data display andfeedback to nurses | Type of data displayed (for tuberculosis and routine care data) | Observation |
| Data quality checking | Procedures of data checking and actors involved | Interviews |
Managerial and technical dimensions of DHs A and B performance
| Governing bodies | Committee | Regional faith-based coordination committee of the Health | Hospital management committee |
| Hospital Management Board | |||
| Leadership | Leadership strength | Strong | Weak |
| Shared | Centralised at the directorate level | ||
| Resources generation | User fees collected | 222.49 million FCFA 86% of revenues managed by the hospital in 2010 | 37.9 million FCFA, 77% of revenues managed by the hospital in 2010 |
| | Subsidies from the Ministry of Health | Irregular funding (35.4 million FCFA in 2010) used on the basis of hospital needs | Regular lump funding every six months used on the basis of directives from the central directorate (progressively decreased from 15.4 million FCFA in 2001 to 10.84 million FCFA in 2010) |
| No wages paid to staff | Wages to technical staff | ||
| | Search for external funding from donors | Pro-active | Low |
| Regular external support in terms of technical expertise, equipment, drugs, infrastructure rehabilitation and construction from foreign organisations | Little support from local associations in 2010 (beds and mattresses) | ||
| Management | Scope of management practices | Related to faith-based values | Administrative procedures |
| Financial resources | Based on hospital needs and strategic plans | Based on guidelines from the Ministries of Health and of Finances, and are bureaucratic | |
| Human resources | Decentralised management by hospital committees | Centralised management | |
| Feedback to staff | Openly discussed at weekly meetings | Rare, with some aspects withheld | |
| Maintenance | Well-equipped support services (e.g., woodwork, electricity and plumbing) | Scarce support service | |
| Support and administrative staff | 22 | 9 | |
| Human resources | Number of staff | Technical staff: 41 | Technical staff: 23 |
| Medical doctors | 2 (2003–2006); 3 (2007–2010) | 1 (2003–2006); 3(2007–2010) | |
| Inhabitants per medical doctor | 50,872 inhabitants | 23,817 inhabitants | |
| Equipment | Number of beds | 157 | 49 |
| Technical equipment | Good | Poor | |
| Radiograph, 2 echographs, Mammograph, cardiotopograph, 2 well-equipped surgical theatres, electronic sphygmomanometers in each ward, oxygen | A small surgical theatre with little equipment | ||
| | Amenities for patients | High-quality ward | Not available |
| Tap water and electricity permanently available | Tap water only available in the morning, frequent electricity cut-offs |
General health care indicators in the DHs A and B
| A | Outpatients received | 16956 | 20177 | 13773 | 8852 | 11673 | 11168 | 10937 | 9177 | 7398 |
| Outpatients/1000 inhabitants per year | 143 | 166 | 110 | 69 | 88 | 82 | 78 | 63 | 50 | |
| Inpatients | NA | 3014 | 3247 | 3140 | 3196 | 3308 | 3371 | 3268 | 3386 | |
| Inpatients/1000 inhabitants/year | NA | 25 | 25 | 24 | 24 | 24 | 24 | 23 | 23 | |
| B | Outpatients received | 2463 | 2878 | 2113 | 2191 | 2271 | 2445 | 3183 | 3505 | 4986 |
| | Outpatients/1000 inhabitants per year | 32 | 37 | 26 | 27 | 27 | 28 | 35 | 38 | 52 |
| | Inpatients | 744 | 790 | 738 | 675 | 716 | 954 | 1147 | 1538 | 1539 |
| Inpatients/1000 inhabitants per year | 10 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 8 | 11 | 13 | 17 | 16 |
NA: Not Available.
Figure 1Number of tuberculosis cases at DHA and DHB, and notification rates of all cases of tuberculosis at DHA, DHB, Adamaoua region and the national level At DHB, data on tuberculosis care between 1990 and 1997 were not available. Also at regional level, data on tuberculosis were only available after 2003 when the DOTS strategy was introduced in the Region.
Effects of NTCP on the level of human resources for health of the DHs A and B
| Stock of personnel | No additional staff recruitment | No additional staff recruitment |
| Criteria for identifying the TDTC staff | Availability, seriousness, obligingness | Availability, seriousness, obligingness |
| Internal migration from general health care to TB activities | Since 2008, one assistant nurse dedicated to the TDTC | Partial migration: the TDTC nurse was head of a ward (surgery from 2003 to 2008 and medicine since 2009) |
| One laboratory technician dedicated to sputum smear processing | ||
| Labour force activity | Detection of suspect tuberculosis patients by consulting nurses Processing of sputum smears by a dedicated laboratory technician | Detection of suspect TB patients mainly by medical doctors |
| Drugs dispensation, follow up of hospitalized tuberculosis patients and reporting by the TDTC nurse | Processing of sputum smears by all laboratory technicians | |
| Chest radiography by a specialized nurse | Drugs dispensation and reporting by head nurse of the medicine ward | |
| | | |
| Earnings | No staff paid by the NTCP | No staff paid by the NTCP |
| Incentives | 15000 FCFA given to the TDTC nurse per trimester since 2010 | 15000 FCFA given to the TDTC nurse per trimester since 2010 |
| Fees for sputum smear managed by the TDTC nurse | Fees for sputum smear included in hospital revenues | |
| Productivity | No patient increase following the TDTC creation | No patient increase following the TDTC creation |
| Education and training | Competencies gained on counselling, treatment of respiratory tract infections, smear processing and reading of slides on microscope by trained staff | Competencies gained on counselling, treatment of respiratory tract infections, smear processing and reading of slides on microscope by trained staff |
| Workshops organized on tuberculosis care for TDTC staff and hospital managers | Workshops organized on tuberculosis care for TDTC staff and hospital managers | |
| Quarterly supervision of the TDTC staff by the NTCP coordinators | Quarterly supervision of the TDTC staff by the NTCP coordinators |
Effects of the NTCP on the technical capacity of DHs A and B
| Permanent allocation since 2003 | Drugs | Anti-tuberculosis drugs for adults and children | Anti-tuberculosis drugs for adults only | Frequent out-of-stocks registered |
| | Reagents | Sulfuric acid, Methylene blue, Fuschin | Sulfuric acid, Methylene blue, Fuschin | Reagents used for sputum smear processing; used for other tests for non-TB patients |
| | Other laboratory materials | Slides and sputum collectors | Slides and sputum collectors | Equipment used for all patients |
| Sporadic allocation | Logistics | One motorcycle in 2006 | No motorcycle | The motorcycle is used for other hospital outreach activities |
| | Equipments | Two electric microscopes in 2003 and 2007 | Two electric microscopes 2003 and 2006 | Equipment used for all patients |
| | Infrastructures Rehabilitation | No rehabilitation | Rehabilitation of a small building in 2006 | The unit rehabilitated in 2006 at the DHB is out of use |
| | Finances | 15000 FCFA quarterly allocated to each TDTC | 15000 FCFA quarterly allocated to each TDTC | Office equipment insufficient in both TDTC |
| Sputum smear fees collected and managed by the TDTC nurse |
Effects of the NTCP on routine health information system at DHs A and B
| Reporting system | Printed tuberculosis tools (registers, patient treatment card, 2 quarterly reporting forms) introduced by the NTCP in 2003 | Printed tuberculosis tools (registers, patient treatment card, 2 quarterly reporting forms) introduced by the NTCP in 2003 |
| Printers registers for routine HIS | Registers manually designed for routine HIS | |
| Designer of reporting forms | NTCP for the tuberculosis HIS | NTCP for the tuberculosis HIS |
| Ministry of health for the routine reporting form | ||
| Managers of the hospital for registers | ||
| Central level of the church for registers and reports | | |
| Software for HIS | No | No |
| Computers acquired from hospital resources | Computers acquired from hospital resources | |
| Recruitment of a HIS staff | No for tuberculosis HIS | No |
| Yes, in 2008, but only in charge of routine reporting and paid from hospital revenues | ||
| Skills of the HIS staff in using computer | No specific training on HIS management | No specific training on HIS management |
| Complexity of the reporting forms | Simple for tuberculosis tools but takes too much time | Simple for tuberculosis tools but takes too much time |
| Filling routine registers is easy | Filling routine registers is easy | |
| Procedures | Simple | Simple |
| | | |
| Information distribution | Reports sent to the regional NTCP coordination since 2003 (completeness: 100%) | Reports sent to the regional NTCP coordination since 2003 (completeness: 100%) |
| Routine reports sent to the district till 2006, but regularly to the Church hierarchy | Routine reports sent to the district in 2010 | |
| Interest devoted to reporting | Very high for the NTCP | Very high for the NTCP |
| Low for routine reports | Low for routine reports | |
| Supervision | Quarterly by the NTCP coordinators, all tuberculosis tools reviewed | Quarterly by the NTCP coordinators, all tuberculosis tools reviewed |
| Rare for routine activities | Rare for routine activities | |
| Training | No specific training on HIS | No specific training on HIS |
| Finances | No additional resources for HIS | No additional resources for HIS |
| Allocation of computer | Computers acquired from hospital resources | Computers acquired from hospital resources |
| Allocation of reporting forms and other materials | Tuberculosis reporting tools provided by the NTCP | Tuberculosis reporting tools provided by the NTCP |
| Routine registers provided by the Church | ||
| | | |
| Level of knowledge of content of HIS forms | Very good for tuberculosis HIS, low for staff working in ward | Very good for tuberculosis HIS, low for staff working in ward |
| Data quality checking skills | Good for the TDTC nurse | Good for the TDTC nurse |
| Routine data rarely checked | Routine data checked by the Director | |
| Competency in HIS tasks | Low | Low |
| Motivation | Very high for the TDTC staff | Very high for the TDTC staff |
| Low for other staff | Low for other staff | |
| Problem solving tasks | Only raw data transmitted | Only raw data transmitted |
| | | |
| Data collection | Data rigorously filled in tuberculosis registers | Data rigorously filled in tuberculosis registers |
| Incomplete routine data collection | Incomplete routine data collection | |
| Data processing | All quarterly tuberculosis reports done since 2003 | All quarterly tuberculosis reports done since 2003 |
| Lot of missing routine reports | All routine monthly reports done since 1998 | |
| Routine reports not done since 2006 | ||
| Data analysis | Little analysis | Little analysis |
| Data transmission | Completeness : 100% for tuberculosis reports | Completeness : 100% |
| Routine information transmitted only to the faith-based hierarchy | Only the 2010 routine reports sent to the district level | |
| Data display | No | No |
| Data quality checking | Yes for tuberculosis reports | Yes for tuberculosis reports |
| No for routine reports | Rarely for routine reports | |
| Feedback to ward nurses | No | No |
Figure 2Organisation of tuberculosis control activities in health districts A and B. HC: Health Centre; TB: Tuberculosis. Patient flow health service activities.
Missed opportunities for building synergies between the NTCP and local health systems
| Recruitment of additional staff | |
| Identification of training needs for DHs and health centres staff members | |
| Organisation of in-service training with the support of regional disease control programmes managers | |
| Reinforcement of competencies of the district management teams in organizing, monitoring and evaluating tuberculosis control activities | |
| Implication of district management teams in the supervision of TDTC | |
| Standardisation of routine data collection tools for all DHs | |
| Elaboration of a unique data reporting tools that bundles routine and programmes’ data | |
| Development of software for managing health data at DH and DHS levels | |
| Utilisation of the electronic system for data transmission and feedback between DHs, DHS and regional programme coordinations | |
| Reinforcement of capacities of district management teams and DH staff in the management of HIS for decision-making | |
| Identification of hospital technical needs and allocation of resources on the basis of hospital needs | |
| Submission of health system strengthening proposals to the Global Fund against HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria | |
| Organization of the referral system | |
| Development of the collaboration between HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis care at facility level |