| Literature DB >> 32169853 |
Morris Ogero1,2, Samuel Akech3, Lucas Malla3, Ambrose Agweyu3, Grace Irimu3,4, Mike English3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We explored who actually provides most admission care in hospitals offering supervised experiential training to graduating clinicians in a high mortality setting where practices deviate from guideline recommendations.Entities:
Keywords: adherence to clinical guidelines; care cascade; general paediatrics; quality of care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32169853 PMCID: PMC7361020 DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2019-317256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dis Child ISSN: 0003-9888 Impact factor: 3.791
Figure 1Study population. Success with patient–clinician record linkage varied across hospitals. For instance, in eight hospitals, over 90% of all patients were linked while in the remaining five hospitals linked patients ranged from 52.5% to 86.6%. Malaria was more common among patients not linked reflecting lower success at record linkage in hospitals in settings of high malaria endemicity. CIN, Clinical Information Network; cPAQC, correctness of Paediatric Admission Quality of Care; HCW, healthcare worker.
Distribution of patient characteristics across groups
| Patient characteristics | Linked (n=53 003) | Not linked (n=7048) |
| Mortality | 3199 (6.03%) | 449 (6.42%) |
| Age (months), median (IQR) | 17 (7–42) | 24 (10–57) |
| Gender (female) | 23 547 (44.59%) | 3078 (44.17%) |
| Weight (kg), median (IQR) | 9 (6–14) | 10 (8–16) |
| Fever | 31 096 (72.48%) | 4025 (75.15%) |
| Unresponsive on AVPU scale | 457 (1.08%) | 57 (1.08%) |
| Malaria | 10 831 (20.43%) | 2285 (32.42%) |
| Pneumonia | 20 267 (38.24%) | 2084 (29.57%) |
| Dehydration | 9412 (17.76%) | 1181 (16.76%) |
| One comorbidity | 29 738 (81.67%) | 3874 (77.31%) |
| Two comorbidities | 6359 (17.46%) | 1073 (22.41%) |
| Three comorbidities | 314 (0.86%) | 64 (1.28%) |
AVPU, alert verbal pain unresponsive.
Comparison of patient admission workload for different cadres and between the strike year and a period without healthcare workers’ strikes
| Patients admitted in the non-strike period (n=44 719) | Patients admitted during strike year (December 2016 to November 2017) (n=8284) | |||||
| Clinician cadre | Median number of | Median number of patients per cadre (IQR) | Median number of patients per each clinician (IQR) | Median number of | Median number of patients per cadre (IQR) | Median number of patients per each clinician |
| Clinical officer | 6 (2–14) | 47 (11–157) | 10 (3–24) | 3 (1–4) | 3 (0–24) | 4 (1–10) |
| CO intern | 46 (41–86) | 1328 (995–1579) | 13 (4–29) | 15 (9–30) | 213 (127–416) | 5 (2–17) |
| Medical officer | 5 (2–8) | 82 (5–501) | 17 (2–73) | 1 (1–5) | 5 (1–20) | 4 (1–11) |
| MO intern | 27 (22–34) | 1436 (999–1660) | 40 (9–78) | 10(7–13) | 290 (164–466) | 10 (2–48) |
CO, clinical officer; IQR, interquatile range; MO, medical officer.
Figure 2Patients admitted by clinicians of various cadres across hospitals. Hospitals are arranged from left to right in the descending order according to the proportion of patients admitted by medical officer interns (MOI). Red and blue bars without values represent cadres whose admissions were <4% in a given hospital. CO, clinical officer; MO, medical officer.
Figure 3Performance of items constituting the correctness of Paediatric Admission Quality of Care (cPAQC) score for patients with diarrhoea/dehydration, malaria and pneumonia as assessed for medical officer interns (MOI). The cPAQC score spans four items of a care cascade such that correct performance of steps later in the pathway is only possible if earlier steps are also correct (represented as progression from left to right on the X-axis where axis labels also represent progression of the cPAQC score from 1 to 4). Performance is represented as the percentage of the 10 115 patients (admitted by MOI) who achieved cPAQC scores for the respective diagnoses of 1, 2, 3 or 4.
Results of multivariable model showing the degree to which clinician and patient factors (represented by adjusted odds ratios and 95% CI) are associated with a cPAQC score of ≥2 used as an indicator for more guideline-adherent care (n=19 072)
| Covariate | AOR | 95% credible intervals |
| Comorbidities | ||
| One | Ref | |
| Two | 0.12 | 0.10 to 0.14* |
| Three | 0.02 | 0.01 to 0.05* |
| Clinician cadre | ||
| COI | Ref | |
| MOI | 1.19 | 1.07 to 1.34* |
| Practice period | ||
| Early | Ref | |
| Late | 1.09 | 1.02 to 1.18* |
| Illness severity classification | ||
| Non-severe | Ref | |
| Severe | 1.82 | 1.68 to 1.96* |
| Clinician gender | ||
| Male | Ref | |
| Female | 1.02 | 0.92 to 1.13 |
| Child sex | ||
| Female | Ref | |
| Male | 1.01 | 0.95 to 1.09 |
| Child age (months) | ||
| 1–11 | Ref | |
| 12–59 | 1.21 | 1.13 to 1.30* |
*Denotes a statistically significant relationship where <1 means less guideline adherent and >1 means more guideline adherent.
AOR, adjusted odds ratio; COI, clinical officer intern; cPAQC, correctness of Paediatric Admission Quality of Care; MOI, medical officer intern.