Cargando…

Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi

BACKGROUND: In Malawi, passive partner notification is the mainstay method of partner notification (PN). Despite its wide use, the proportion of sexual partners referred for care through this method is very low. We aimed to increase the proportion of sexual partner referral through passive PN. METHO...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Matoga, MM, Hosseinipour, MC, Jere, E, Ndalama, B, Kamtambe, B, Chasela, C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6223304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30417175
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2576-1420.1000128
_version_ 1783369381227528192
author Matoga, MM
Hosseinipour, MC
Jere, E
Ndalama, B
Kamtambe, B
Chasela, C
author_facet Matoga, MM
Hosseinipour, MC
Jere, E
Ndalama, B
Kamtambe, B
Chasela, C
author_sort Matoga, MM
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In Malawi, passive partner notification is the mainstay method of partner notification (PN). Despite its wide use, the proportion of sexual partners referred for care through this method is very low. We aimed to increase the proportion of sexual partner referral through passive PN. METHODS: We implemented a quality improvement (QI) project at Bwaila STI unit in Lilongwe, Malawi between January and June 2017 using a pre- and post- intervention quasi-experimental study design. Pre-intervention, we conducted key-informant interviews and clinic observations and used the findings to design a QI project using expert opinion. The intervention included three change ideas: early start time of the clinic, shortening of the group health talk and expedited clinic flow for sexual partners. Each change idea was tested twice through 1-week long Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles using the model for improvement (MFI) and then combined and tested twice. Process data were collected and monitored using run charts. Post-intervention, we evaluated the proportion of sexual partners who presented to the clinic, to detect a 10% increase at 95% power and α=0.05, between pre- and post-intervention periods. RESULTS: The average duration of the group health talk dropped from 56 minutes to 38 minutes and the duration of clinic stay for sexual partners reduced by 45 minutes (from 1hour 36 minutes to 51 minutes). The average clinic start time improved from 09:02 hours to 08:17 hours. The proportion of sexual partner referral increased by 37% (P=0.04) - from 15.6% to 21.4%. We observed an upward trend in the proportion of sexual partners referred in the post-intervention period. CONCLUSION: The yield of sexual partners through passive PN was improved using a simple QI intervention implemented using the MFI. However, the proportion of sexual partner referral remains suboptimal. More effort is required to increase the proportion of sexual partner referral in Malawi.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6223304
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62233042018-11-08 Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi Matoga, MM Hosseinipour, MC Jere, E Ndalama, B Kamtambe, B Chasela, C J Infect Dis Med Article BACKGROUND: In Malawi, passive partner notification is the mainstay method of partner notification (PN). Despite its wide use, the proportion of sexual partners referred for care through this method is very low. We aimed to increase the proportion of sexual partner referral through passive PN. METHODS: We implemented a quality improvement (QI) project at Bwaila STI unit in Lilongwe, Malawi between January and June 2017 using a pre- and post- intervention quasi-experimental study design. Pre-intervention, we conducted key-informant interviews and clinic observations and used the findings to design a QI project using expert opinion. The intervention included three change ideas: early start time of the clinic, shortening of the group health talk and expedited clinic flow for sexual partners. Each change idea was tested twice through 1-week long Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles using the model for improvement (MFI) and then combined and tested twice. Process data were collected and monitored using run charts. Post-intervention, we evaluated the proportion of sexual partners who presented to the clinic, to detect a 10% increase at 95% power and α=0.05, between pre- and post-intervention periods. RESULTS: The average duration of the group health talk dropped from 56 minutes to 38 minutes and the duration of clinic stay for sexual partners reduced by 45 minutes (from 1hour 36 minutes to 51 minutes). The average clinic start time improved from 09:02 hours to 08:17 hours. The proportion of sexual partner referral increased by 37% (P=0.04) - from 15.6% to 21.4%. We observed an upward trend in the proportion of sexual partners referred in the post-intervention period. CONCLUSION: The yield of sexual partners through passive PN was improved using a simple QI intervention implemented using the MFI. However, the proportion of sexual partner referral remains suboptimal. More effort is required to increase the proportion of sexual partner referral in Malawi. 2018-08-10 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6223304/ /pubmed/30417175 http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2576-1420.1000128 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Matoga, MM
Hosseinipour, MC
Jere, E
Ndalama, B
Kamtambe, B
Chasela, C
Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title_full Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title_fullStr Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title_short Improving STI and HIV Passive Partner Notification using the Model for Improvement: A Quality Improvement Study in Lilongwe Malawi
title_sort improving sti and hiv passive partner notification using the model for improvement: a quality improvement study in lilongwe malawi
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6223304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30417175
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2576-1420.1000128
work_keys_str_mv AT matogamm improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi
AT hosseinipourmc improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi
AT jeree improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi
AT ndalamab improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi
AT kamtambeb improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi
AT chaselac improvingstiandhivpassivepartnernotificationusingthemodelforimprovementaqualityimprovementstudyinlilongwemalawi