| Literature DB >> 29486773 |
James S Miller1, Lacey English2, Michael Matte3, Rapheal Mbusa3, Moses Ntaro4, Shem Bwambale5, Jessica Kenney6, Mark J Siedner6, Raquel Reyes2, Patrick T Lee7, Edgar Mulogo4, Geren S Stone6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Village health workers (VHWs) in five villages in Bugoye subcounty (Kasese District, Uganda) provide integrated community case management (iCCM) services, in which VHWs evaluate and treat malaria, pneumonia, and diarrhoea in children under 5 years of age. VHWs use a "Sick Child Job Aid" that guides them through the evaluation and treatment of these illnesses. A retrospective observational study was conducted to measure the quality of iCCM care provided by 23 VHWs in 5 villages in Bugoye subcounty over a 2-year period.Entities:
Keywords: Community health workers; Integrated community case management; Quality of care; Village health workers
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29486773 PMCID: PMC6389111 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2241-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Summary of patient demographics and care provided for all iCCM patients (over 2 years)
| Characteristic | Overall n (%) | Per VHW mean (range) |
|---|---|---|
| Total patient visits | 5462 (100%) | 237 (105–441) |
| Presenting complaintsa | ||
| Fever | 2887 (53%) | 126 (43–316) |
| Cough/fast breathing | 2276 (42%) | 99 (40–221) |
| Diarrhoea | 1460 (27%) | 63 (18–139) |
| Patients with danger signsb | 90 (2%) | 3.9 (0–16) |
| Patients receiving RDT for malaria | 3454 (63%) | 150 (56–343) |
| Positive RDTs | 2431 (70%) | 106 (19–265) |
| Negative RDTs | 1023 (30%) | 44 (5–102) |
| Patients receiving oral ACT | 2380 (44%) | 103 (17–255) |
| Patients receiving rectal artesunate | 36 (0.7%) | 1.6 (0–10) |
| Patients receiving oral amoxicillin | 2370 (43%) | 103 (41–244) |
| Patients receiving ORS | 1555 (28%) | 68 (23–138) |
| Patients receiving zinc | 1554 (28%) | 68 (22–140) |
| Patients treated with 24 h of illness onset | 2102 (38%) | 91 (0–319) |
| Patients referred to health centre | 560 (10%) | 24 (1–80) |
| Medication reactionsc | 0 (0%) | 0 (n/a) |
| Deaths | 2 (0.04%) | 0.09 (0–1) |
aPercentages add to > 100%, as some patients presented with multiple complaints
b95 danger signs patients were identified in the sick patient registers, indicating that five patients were missed in the aggregate data
cGiven that one case was found in the LQAS sample in which a medication reaction occurred, the reporting of zero medication reactions in all patient visits must be incorrect
Patient demographics and presenting conditions for LQAS sample (overall n = 575)
| Characteristic | N (%) or mean (range) |
|---|---|
| Female | 286 (52%) |
| Age | 31 months (2 months–5 years) |
| Village | |
| Bugoye | 125 (22%) |
| Ihani | 112 (19%) |
| Kanyaminigo | 125 (22%) |
| Kikokera | 88 (15%) |
| Muramba I | 125 (22%) |
| Presenting complaintsa | |
| Fever | 293 (51%) |
| Cough/fast breathing | 237 (41%) |
| Diarrhoea | 155 (27%) |
| Other | 66 (11%) |
| Patients with danger signs | 11 (2%) |
| Outcomes | |
| Patients referred to health centre | 66 (11%) |
| Medication reactions | 1 (0.2%) |
| Deaths | 0 (0%) |
aPercentages add to > 100%, as some patients presented with multiple complaints
Quality of care in LQAS sample
| Measure | N (%) |
|---|---|
| RDT performed for patient presenting with fever (n = 293) | 283 (97%) |
| Malaria patients receiving correct management (n = 255) | 240 (94%) |
| Patients with negative RDT receiving correct management (n = 101) | 44 (44%) |
| Respiratory rate recorded for patient presenting with cough/fast breathing (n = 237) | 223 (94%) |
| Patients with elevated respiratory rate receiving correct treatment (n = 228) | 216 (95%) |
| Patients with diarrhoea receiving ORS and zinc (n = 155) | 150 (97%) |
| Patients inappropriately treated with ACT (n = 575) | 11 (2%) |
| Patients inappropriately treated with amoxicillin (n = 575) | 23 (4%) |
| Patients inappropriately treated with ORS, zinc, or both (n = 575) | 18 (3%) |
| Patients with danger signs appropriately referred to health centre (n = 11) | 11 (100%) |
| Patients with danger signs receiving appropriate pre-referral treatment (n = 11) | 4 (36%) |
| Patients receiving overall correct management (n = 575) | 434 (75%) |
| Patients receiving overall correct management in months 1–6 of iCCM implementation (n = 152) | 96 (63%) |
| Patients receiving overall correct management in months 7–12 of iCCM implementation (n = 146) | 116 (79%) |
| Patients receiving overall correct management in months 13–18 of iCCM implementation (n = 154) | 117 (76%) |
| Patients receiving overall correct management in months 19–24 of iCCM implementation (n = 123) | 105 (85%) |
| VHWs providing high-quality care over 2 years, according to LQAS decision rules (n = 23) | 9 (39%) |
Fig. 1Correct management over time—Lowess plot
GEE logistic regression models for overall quality of care over time
| Variable | OR | 95% CI | p value | Model QICa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1: biannual groupings, with months 1–6 as reference group | n/a | |||
| Months 7–12 | 2.33 | (1.33, 4.11) | p = 0.003 | |
| Months 13–18 | 1.84 | (1.05, 3.20) | p = 0.032 | |
| Months 19–24 | 3.05 | (1.76, 5.29) | p < 0.001 | |
| Model 2: time as a continuous variable | 614.62 | |||
| Months since iCCM services initiation | 1.06 | (1.02, 1.09) | p < 0.001 | |
| Model 3: time as a continuous variable, with a spline knot at month 6 | 612.16 | |||
| Months since iCCM services initiation—months 1–6 | 1.24 | (1.08, 1.43) | p = 0.003 | |
| Months since iCCM services initiation—months 7–24 | 1.01 | (0.98, 1.04) | p = 0.47 | |
aQuasi-likelihood under the independence model criterion (QIC). This is a modification of the Akaike information criterion (AIC) so that it can be applied to GEE regression models to assess goodness of fit of different models. A lower QIC term reflects a better-fitting regression model. It is not applicable when using factor variables, so it is not calculated for Model 1, which uses a categorical time variable
Fig. 2Post-estimation margins plot of regression model with spline knot at 6 months