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Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project

INTRODUCTION: Zambia’s under-resourced public health system will not be able to deliver on its health-related Millennium Development Goals without a substantial acceleration in mortality reduction. Reducing mortality will depend not only upon increasing access to health care but also upon improving...

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Autores principales: Stringer, Jeffrey SA, Chisembele-Taylor, Angela, Chibwesha, Carla J, Chi, Harmony F, Ayles, Helen, Manda, Handson, Mazimba, Wendy, Schuttner, Linnaea, Sindano, Ntazana, Williams, Frank B, Chintu, Namwinga, Chilengi, Roma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3668289/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23819614
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-S2-S7
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author Stringer, Jeffrey SA
Chisembele-Taylor, Angela
Chibwesha, Carla J
Chi, Harmony F
Ayles, Helen
Manda, Handson
Mazimba, Wendy
Schuttner, Linnaea
Sindano, Ntazana
Williams, Frank B
Chintu, Namwinga
Chilengi, Roma
author_facet Stringer, Jeffrey SA
Chisembele-Taylor, Angela
Chibwesha, Carla J
Chi, Harmony F
Ayles, Helen
Manda, Handson
Mazimba, Wendy
Schuttner, Linnaea
Sindano, Ntazana
Williams, Frank B
Chintu, Namwinga
Chilengi, Roma
author_sort Stringer, Jeffrey SA
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Zambia’s under-resourced public health system will not be able to deliver on its health-related Millennium Development Goals without a substantial acceleration in mortality reduction. Reducing mortality will depend not only upon increasing access to health care but also upon improving the quality of care that is delivered. Our project proposes to improve the quality of clinical care and to improve utilization of that care, through a targeted quality improvement (QI) intervention delivered at the facility and community level. DESCRIPTION OF IMPLEMENTATION: The project is being carried out 42 primary health care facilities that serve a largely rural population of more than 450,000 in Zambia’s Lusaka Province. We have deployed six QI teams to implement consensus clinical protocols, forms, and systems at each site. The QI teams define new clinical quality expectations and provide tools needed to deliver on those expectations. They also monitor the care that is provided and mentor facility staff to improve care quality. We also engage community health workers to actively refer and follow up patients. EVALUATION DESIGN: Project implementation occurs over a period of four years in a stepped expansion to six randomly selected new facilities every three months. Three annual household surveys will determine population estimates of age-standardized mortality and under-5 mortality in each community before, during, and after implementation. Surveys will also provide measures of childhood vaccine coverage, pregnancy care utilization, and general adult health. Health facility surveys will assess coverage of primary health interventions and measures of health system effectiveness. DISCUSSION: The patient-provider interaction is an important interface where the community and the health system meet. Our project aims to reduce population mortality by substantially improving this interaction. Our success will hinge upon the ability of mentoring and continuous QI to improve clinical service delivery. It will also be critical that once the quality of services improves, increasing proportions of the population will recognize their value and begin to utilize them.
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spelling pubmed-36682892013-06-03 Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project Stringer, Jeffrey SA Chisembele-Taylor, Angela Chibwesha, Carla J Chi, Harmony F Ayles, Helen Manda, Handson Mazimba, Wendy Schuttner, Linnaea Sindano, Ntazana Williams, Frank B Chintu, Namwinga Chilengi, Roma BMC Health Serv Res Study Protocol INTRODUCTION: Zambia’s under-resourced public health system will not be able to deliver on its health-related Millennium Development Goals without a substantial acceleration in mortality reduction. Reducing mortality will depend not only upon increasing access to health care but also upon improving the quality of care that is delivered. Our project proposes to improve the quality of clinical care and to improve utilization of that care, through a targeted quality improvement (QI) intervention delivered at the facility and community level. DESCRIPTION OF IMPLEMENTATION: The project is being carried out 42 primary health care facilities that serve a largely rural population of more than 450,000 in Zambia’s Lusaka Province. We have deployed six QI teams to implement consensus clinical protocols, forms, and systems at each site. The QI teams define new clinical quality expectations and provide tools needed to deliver on those expectations. They also monitor the care that is provided and mentor facility staff to improve care quality. We also engage community health workers to actively refer and follow up patients. EVALUATION DESIGN: Project implementation occurs over a period of four years in a stepped expansion to six randomly selected new facilities every three months. Three annual household surveys will determine population estimates of age-standardized mortality and under-5 mortality in each community before, during, and after implementation. Surveys will also provide measures of childhood vaccine coverage, pregnancy care utilization, and general adult health. Health facility surveys will assess coverage of primary health interventions and measures of health system effectiveness. DISCUSSION: The patient-provider interaction is an important interface where the community and the health system meet. Our project aims to reduce population mortality by substantially improving this interaction. Our success will hinge upon the ability of mentoring and continuous QI to improve clinical service delivery. It will also be critical that once the quality of services improves, increasing proportions of the population will recognize their value and begin to utilize them. BioMed Central 2013-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3668289/ /pubmed/23819614 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-S2-S7 Text en Copyright © 2013 Stringer et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Stringer, Jeffrey SA
Chisembele-Taylor, Angela
Chibwesha, Carla J
Chi, Harmony F
Ayles, Helen
Manda, Handson
Mazimba, Wendy
Schuttner, Linnaea
Sindano, Ntazana
Williams, Frank B
Chintu, Namwinga
Chilengi, Roma
Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title_full Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title_fullStr Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title_full_unstemmed Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title_short Protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural Zambia: the Better Health Outcomes through Mentoring and Assessment (BHOMA) project
title_sort protocol-driven primary care and community linkages to improve population health in rural zambia: the better health outcomes through mentoring and assessment (bhoma) project
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3668289/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23819614
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-S2-S7
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