Ghulam Farooq Mansoor1, Paata Chikvaidze2, Sherin Varkey3, Ariel Higgins-Steele3, Najibullah Safi4, Adela Mubasher2, Khaksar Yusufi3, Sayed Alisha Alawi4. 1. Health Protection and Research Organization, House P 27, Street 1. Qala-e-Fathullah, District 10, Kabul City, Afghanistan. 2. World Health Organization, Afghanistan office: UNOCA Compound, Kabul Jalalabad High Way, Kabul city, Afghanistan. 3. United Nation's Children Fund (UNICEF) Country office, UNOCA Compound, Kabul Jalalabad High Way, Kabul city, Afghanistan. 4. Ministry of Public Health, Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, Great Masoud Square, Wazir Mohammad Akbar Khan, Kabul City, Afghanistan.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess quality of the national Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) program services provided for sick children at primary health facilities in Afghanistan. DESIGN: Mixed methods including cross-sectional study. SETTING: Thirteen (of thirty-four) provinces in Afghanistan. PARTICIPANTS: Observation of case management and re-examination of 177 sick children, exit interviews with caretakers and review of equipment/supplies at 44 health facilities. INTERVENTION: Introduction and scale up of Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses at primary health care facilities. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Care of sick children according to IMCI guidelines, health worker skills and essential health system elements. RESULTS: Thirty-two (71%) of the health workers were trained in IMCI and five (11%) received supervision in clinical case management during the past 6 months. On average, 5.4 out of 10 main assessment tasks were performed during cases observed, the index being higher in children seen by trained providers than untrained (6.3 vs 3.5, 95% CI 5.8-6.8 vs 2.9-4.1). In all, 74% of the 104 children who needed oral antibiotics received prescriptions, while 30% received complete and correct advice and 30% were overprescribed, and more so by untrained providers. Home care counseling was associated with provider training status (41.3% by trained and 24.5% by untrained). Essential oral and pre-referral injectable medicine and equipment/supplies were available in 66%, 23%, and 45% of health facilities, respectively. CONCLUSION: IMCI training improved assessment, rational use of antibiotics and counseling; further investment in IMCI in Afghanistan, continuing provider capacity building and supportive supervision for improved quality of care and counseling for sick children is needed, especially given high burden treatable childhood illness.
OBJECTIVE: To assess quality of the national Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) program services provided for sick children at primary health facilities in Afghanistan. DESIGN: Mixed methods including cross-sectional study. SETTING: Thirteen (of thirty-four) provinces in Afghanistan. PARTICIPANTS: Observation of case management and re-examination of 177 sick children, exit interviews with caretakers and review of equipment/supplies at 44 health facilities. INTERVENTION: Introduction and scale up of Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses at primary health care facilities. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Care of sick children according to IMCI guidelines, health worker skills and essential health system elements. RESULTS: Thirty-two (71%) of the health workers were trained in IMCI and five (11%) received supervision in clinical case management during the past 6 months. On average, 5.4 out of 10 main assessment tasks were performed during cases observed, the index being higher in children seen by trained providers than untrained (6.3 vs 3.5, 95% CI 5.8-6.8 vs 2.9-4.1). In all, 74% of the 104 children who needed oral antibiotics received prescriptions, while 30% received complete and correct advice and 30% were overprescribed, and more so by untrained providers. Home care counseling was associated with provider training status (41.3% by trained and 24.5% by untrained). Essential oral and pre-referral injectable medicine and equipment/supplies were available in 66%, 23%, and 45% of health facilities, respectively. CONCLUSION: IMCI training improved assessment, rational use of antibiotics and counseling; further investment in IMCI in Afghanistan, continuing provider capacity building and supportive supervision for improved quality of care and counseling for sick children is needed, especially given high burden treatable childhood illness.
Authors: Faridullah Atiqzai; Partamin Manalai; Sher Shah Amin; Karen M Edmond; Malalai Naziri; Mohammad Samim Soroush; Sharmina Sultana; Khaksar Yousufi; Thomas van den Akker; Jelle Stekelenburg; Hannah Tappis Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2019-08-30 Impact factor: 2.692
Authors: Christine Kim; Ghulam Farooq Mansoor; Pir Mohammad Paya; Mohammad Homayoun Ludin; Mohammad Javed Ahrar; Mohammad Omar Mashal; Catherine S Todd Journal: Health Res Policy Syst Date: 2020-06-11
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