| Literature DB >> 25966294 |
Hanlie Myburgh1, Joshua P Murphy2, Mea van Huyssteen3, Nicola Foster4, Cornelius J Grobbelaar1, Helen E Struthers2, James A McIntyre5, Theunis Hurter6, Remco P H Peters2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A pragmatic three-tiered approach to monitor the world's largest antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme was adopted by the South African National Department of Health in 2010. With the rapid expansion of the programme, the limitations of the paper-based register (tier 1) were the catalyst for implementation of the stand-alone electronic register (tier 2), which offers simple digitisation of the paper-based register. This article engages with theory on implementation to identify and contextualise enabling and constraining factors for implementation of the electronic register, to describe experiences and use of the register, and to make recommendations for implementation in similar settings where standardisation of ART monitoring and evaluation has not been achieved.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25966294 PMCID: PMC4429075 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The South African national strategy to standardise M&E of patients on ART.
The three-tiered approach comprises paper-based, stand-alone electronic, and networked electronic medical records systems for monitoring and evaluation of the South African ART programme.
Fig 2The 12-step implementation process for the electronic register.
A 12-step implementation process for the electronic register was collaboratively developed by CIDER and the Anova Health Institute. Master training based on this 12-step implementation process aimed to structure and standardise implementation practices for the electronic register among the key implementers across all South African districts.
Characteristics of facilities selected.
| Facility | ART service available (years) | Approx. no. of patients on ART | Decentralisation status | No. of clerks during back-capture | Number of patient records back-captured | Staff dedicated to ART programme | Perceived quality of Paper Register | Data champion present | Time to complete back-capture onto electronic register |
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| A | >5 | ~1300 (large) | “Mother” facility | 2 | 2624 | Yes | Low | No | 3 months |
| B | <5 | ~600 (med) | Decentralised facility | N/A | N/A | Yes | N/A | Yes | “Live” capturing |
| C | >5 | ~400 (small) | Decentralised facility | 1 | 577 | Yes | Med | Yes | 1 month |
| D | <5 | ~300 (small) | Decentralised facility | 2 | 435 | No | Low | No | 5–6 months |
| E | >5 | ~1500 (large) | “Mother” facility | 2 | 2343 | Yes | High | Yes | 4–5 months |
Table 1 shows the five facilities selected for inclusion in our sample. Selection considered the following: to compile a diverse sample determined by the number of patients on ART, decentralisation status, and the historic quality of their ART paper-based register.
* Paper register quality was determined during site visits.
CFIR constructs and definitions.
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| Perceived difficulty of implementation, reflected by duration, scope, radicalness, disruptiveness, centrality, intricacy and number of steps required to implement. |
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| Perception of the advantage of implementing the intervention vs. an alternative solution. |
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| Includes external strategies to spread interventions including policy and regulations, external mandates, recommendations and guidelines. |
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| The absorptive capacity for change, shared receptivity of involved individuals to an intervention and the extent to which use of that intervention will be rewarded, supported, and expected within their organisation. Implementation climate comprises constructs such as |
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| Tangible and immediate indicators of organisational commitment to its decision to implement an intervention. |
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| Individual belief in their own capabilities to execute courses of action to achieve implementation goals. |
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| Attracting and involving appropriate individuals in the implementation and use of the intervention through a combined strategy of social marketing, education, role modelling, training, and other similar activities. |
Table 2 shows the CFIR constructs relevant to our study. The five domains of the CFIR apply to the following specific aspects of implementation of the electronic register. Firstly, intervention characteristics refer to the features of the electronic register. Secondly, outer setting refers to the organisations and the relationships between organisations that influence implementation. In this case these include the provincial and district Departments of Health, the developers of the electronic register (CIDER), and the partner implementer (Anova). Thirdly, the inner setting includes the facility as well as the staff, which overlaps with the fourth, individual characteristics of those involved in implementation. Lastly, the process refers to the activities that comprise the implementation of the electronic register.
Summary of key findings.
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Table 3 is a summary of the results expressed in seven themes with illustrative quotes.
Overview of the CFIR domains, salient constructs, and complimentary characteristics.
| CFIR Construct | Corresponding characteristic(s) |
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| 1. Buy-in from management and facility-level staff |
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| 2. Quality of paper registers |
| 3. Workload | |
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| 4. Leadership from provincial Department of Health |
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| 5. Level of ART service integration / maturity of ART services |
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| 6. Resources (material, human, physical space, training) |
| 7. Role clarity | |
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| 8. Experience with ART programme M&E, level of computer literacy, and personal self-efficacy |
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| 9. Champion |
| 10. Facilitation and support from partner implementer | |
Table 4 shows ten characteristics that fall within the domains and constructs of the CFIR to describe enabling and constraining factors for implementation.
Fig 3Interactions between CFIR domains and constructs.
Implementation occurred at two nodes. The term “node” is used to describe the crucial intersection of CFIR domains to describe how implementation happens. Node 1 predicts the adoption of the electronic register for roll-out while Node 2 describes implementation at facility-level. Although all five domains come into play at each node, the figure shows the most important domains and constructs highlighted in our findings.