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Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial

BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is the largest cause of child deaths in Papua New Guinea (PNG), and hypoxaemia is the major complication causing death in childhood pneumonia, and hypoxaemia is a major factor in deaths from many other common conditions, including bronchiolitis, asthma, sepsis, malaria, trauma,...

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Autores principales: Duke, Trevor, Hwaihwanje, Ilomo, Kaupa, Magdalynn, Karubi, Jonah, Panauwe, Doreen, Sa’avu, Martin, Pulsan, Francis, Prasad, Peter, Maru, Freddy, Tenambo, Henry, Kwaramb, Ambrose, Neal, Eleanor, Graham, Hamish, Izadnegahdar, Rasa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Edinburgh University Global Health Society 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5441450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28567280
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.07.010411
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author Duke, Trevor
Hwaihwanje, Ilomo
Kaupa, Magdalynn
Karubi, Jonah
Panauwe, Doreen
Sa’avu, Martin
Pulsan, Francis
Prasad, Peter
Maru, Freddy
Tenambo, Henry
Kwaramb, Ambrose
Neal, Eleanor
Graham, Hamish
Izadnegahdar, Rasa
author_facet Duke, Trevor
Hwaihwanje, Ilomo
Kaupa, Magdalynn
Karubi, Jonah
Panauwe, Doreen
Sa’avu, Martin
Pulsan, Francis
Prasad, Peter
Maru, Freddy
Tenambo, Henry
Kwaramb, Ambrose
Neal, Eleanor
Graham, Hamish
Izadnegahdar, Rasa
author_sort Duke, Trevor
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is the largest cause of child deaths in Papua New Guinea (PNG), and hypoxaemia is the major complication causing death in childhood pneumonia, and hypoxaemia is a major factor in deaths from many other common conditions, including bronchiolitis, asthma, sepsis, malaria, trauma, perinatal problems, and obstetric emergencies. A reliable source of oxygen therapy can reduce mortality from pneumonia by up to 35%. However, in low and middle income countries throughout the world, improved oxygen systems have not been implemented at large scale in remote, difficult to access health care settings, and oxygen is often unavailable at smaller rural hospitals or district health centers which serve as the first point of referral for childhood illnesses. These hospitals are hampered by lack of reliable power, staff training and other basic services. METHODS: We report the methodology of a large implementation effectiveness trial involving sustainable and renewable oxygen and power systems in 36 health facilities in remote rural areas of PNG. The methodology is a before–and after evaluation involving continuous quality improvement, and a health systems approach. We describe this model of implementation as the considerations and steps involved have wider implications in health systems in other countries. RESULTS: The implementation steps include: defining the criteria for where such an intervention is appropriate, assessment of power supplies and power requirements, the optimal design of a solar power system, specifications for oxygen concentrators and other oxygen equipment that will function in remote environments, installation logistics in remote settings, the role of oxygen analyzers in monitoring oxygen concentrator performance, the engineering capacity required to sustain a program at scale, clinical guidelines and training on oxygen equipment and the treatment of children with severe respiratory infection and other critical illnesses, program costs, and measurement of processes and outcomes to support continuous quality improvement. CONCLUSIONS: This study will evaluate the feasibility and sustainability issues in improving oxygen systems and providing reliable power on a large scale in remote rural settings in PNG, and the impact of this on child mortality from pneumonia over 3 years post–intervention. Taking a continuous quality improvement approach can be transformational for remote health services.
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spelling pubmed-54414502017-05-31 Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial Duke, Trevor Hwaihwanje, Ilomo Kaupa, Magdalynn Karubi, Jonah Panauwe, Doreen Sa’avu, Martin Pulsan, Francis Prasad, Peter Maru, Freddy Tenambo, Henry Kwaramb, Ambrose Neal, Eleanor Graham, Hamish Izadnegahdar, Rasa J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is the largest cause of child deaths in Papua New Guinea (PNG), and hypoxaemia is the major complication causing death in childhood pneumonia, and hypoxaemia is a major factor in deaths from many other common conditions, including bronchiolitis, asthma, sepsis, malaria, trauma, perinatal problems, and obstetric emergencies. A reliable source of oxygen therapy can reduce mortality from pneumonia by up to 35%. However, in low and middle income countries throughout the world, improved oxygen systems have not been implemented at large scale in remote, difficult to access health care settings, and oxygen is often unavailable at smaller rural hospitals or district health centers which serve as the first point of referral for childhood illnesses. These hospitals are hampered by lack of reliable power, staff training and other basic services. METHODS: We report the methodology of a large implementation effectiveness trial involving sustainable and renewable oxygen and power systems in 36 health facilities in remote rural areas of PNG. The methodology is a before–and after evaluation involving continuous quality improvement, and a health systems approach. We describe this model of implementation as the considerations and steps involved have wider implications in health systems in other countries. RESULTS: The implementation steps include: defining the criteria for where such an intervention is appropriate, assessment of power supplies and power requirements, the optimal design of a solar power system, specifications for oxygen concentrators and other oxygen equipment that will function in remote environments, installation logistics in remote settings, the role of oxygen analyzers in monitoring oxygen concentrator performance, the engineering capacity required to sustain a program at scale, clinical guidelines and training on oxygen equipment and the treatment of children with severe respiratory infection and other critical illnesses, program costs, and measurement of processes and outcomes to support continuous quality improvement. CONCLUSIONS: This study will evaluate the feasibility and sustainability issues in improving oxygen systems and providing reliable power on a large scale in remote rural settings in PNG, and the impact of this on child mortality from pneumonia over 3 years post–intervention. Taking a continuous quality improvement approach can be transformational for remote health services. Edinburgh University Global Health Society 2017-06 2017-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5441450/ /pubmed/28567280 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.07.010411 Text en Copyright © 2017 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Duke, Trevor
Hwaihwanje, Ilomo
Kaupa, Magdalynn
Karubi, Jonah
Panauwe, Doreen
Sa’avu, Martin
Pulsan, Francis
Prasad, Peter
Maru, Freddy
Tenambo, Henry
Kwaramb, Ambrose
Neal, Eleanor
Graham, Hamish
Izadnegahdar, Rasa
Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title_full Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title_fullStr Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title_full_unstemmed Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title_short Solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in Papua New Guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
title_sort solar powered oxygen systems in remote health centers in papua new guinea: a large scale implementation effectiveness trial
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5441450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28567280
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.07.010411
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