| Literature DB >> 23574764 |
Antje Blank, Helen Prytherch, Jens Kaltschmidt, Andreas Krings, Felix Sukums, Nathan Mensah, Alphonse Zakane, Svetla Loukanova, Lars L Gustafsson, Rainer Sauerborn, Walter E Haefeli.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite strong efforts to improve maternal care, its quality remains deficient in many countries of Sub-Saharan Africa as persistently high maternal mortality rates testify. The QUALMAT study seeks to improve the performance and motivation of rural health workers and ultimately quality of primary maternal health care services in three African countries Burkina Faso, Ghana, and Tanzania. One major intervention is the introduction of a computerized Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) for rural primary health care centers to be used by health care workers of different educational levels.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23574764 PMCID: PMC3637082 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Countries and specific study districts participating in the QUALMAT project.
Figure 2The QUALMAT study: QUALMAT interventions, including the CDSS and accompanying studies.
Figure 3Decision support by electronic checklists: Guidance through routine actions in maternal and perinatal care is provided by checklists to ensure thorough clinical and laboratory work-up during antenatal care visits.
Figure 4Decision support by electronic checklists: Guidance through routine actions in maternal and perinatal care: Checklists for preventive measures are provided.
Figure 5Algorithms for decision support by integration of data to detect situations of concern are derived from WHO guidelines.
Figure 6Algorithms detect situations of concern which result in immediate decision support through” watch dogs”.
Figure 7Algorithms detect situations of concern which result in displaying detailed information including proposed diagnoses and actions. A link for accessing source documents from WHO or local sources is provided (arrow).
Figure 8Electronic partograph for visualisation of the progress of delivery. The main screen with fetal heart rate and the degree of cervix dilatation is shown here as an example. In this example labour is delayed and the “alert line” of the partograph has been crossed.
Figure 9Electronic partograph: After crossing the alter line (entry at 4 h) the system will remind about the imminent risk and proposes action.
Figure 10Training section: Training documents are accessible without password for individual or group learning sessions. Training documents can be added from different sources and on individual request (e.g. district medical officers).
Features critical to success of electronic decision support [14] and corresponding characteristics of the QUALMAT CDSS development
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| Integration with charting or order entry system to support workflow integration | The system supports the workflow of ANC visits in guiding the nurse step by step through the process. |
| | The structure of the system is streamlined with the antenatal care cards which are the main documentation for pregnant women in these areas. |
| | The delivery process is followed dynamically, designed according to the present workflow. |
| Use of a computer to generate the decision | QUALMAT CDSS is computer based and will be operated from laptops at the health care facility. |
| | Women who are overdue for antenatal care can be identified automatically and contacted. |
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| Automatic provision of decision support as part of clinician workflow | Use of laptops dedicated to the QUALMAT software covers all regular and also unscheduled antenatal care visits, delivery, and the first 24h after delivery. Decision support is issued to the care provider for all relevant decisions during these visits. |
| No need for additional clinician data entry | This was not attempted because the ANC cards currently need to be completed in parallel (in case the woman delivers elsewhere). Printout of the cards is currently not implemented albeit possible as soon as printing infrastructure becomes available. |
| Request documentation of the reason for not following CDSS recommendations | If critical actions (e.g. laboratory tests, preventive measures) are not carried out the reason will be documented (e.g. patient’s refusal, missing equipment, other reason). |
| Provision of decision support at time and location of decision making | The mobile laptops can be used in any room of the health care center and decision support is therefore supported at the point of care. |
| Recommendations executed by noting agreement | Recommended actions during patient visits are marked as done or not done in the system. In addition, on a summary page at the end of each visit care providers are asked to indicate their agreement (or disagreement) with the proposed actions. |
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| Provision of a recommendation, not just an assessment | If situations of concern are detected the system provides detailed and explicit instructions on how to proceed. |
| Promotion of action rather than inaction | Specific actions are proposed such as referral of a patient, drug application, or interventions. |
| Justification of decision support via provision of reasoning | Recommendations can be instantly accessed through links to WHO and local guidelines integrated in the system. |
| Justification of decision support via provision of research evidence | Decision support is based on WHO and local guidelines. Because the provision of a scientific text appeared not to add benefit in a rural African environment, the provision of straightforward and user-friendly WHO guidelines was deemed appropriate. |
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| Local user involvement in development process | Local users were involved in each step of planning and during all test phases of the prototype and the release candidates. |
| Provision of decision support results to patients as well as providers | Patients will not directly see the results of the decision support, e.g. printouts, because the logistics in the given environment do not yet allow for this. |
| | However, providers are always able to review previous and current decisions suggested by the system. |
| CDSS accompanied by periodic performance feedback | CDSS is linked to a performance based incentives scheme. Users will receive regular performance feedback, where data from the CDDS are the major but not the only valuation source for the assessment. |
| CDSS accompanied by conventional education | Extensive training workshops have been held on general and specific computer use. During these workshops guidelines on maternal care were also part of the training schedule. |