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Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach

INTRODUCTION: Early infant diagnosis (EID) and rapid antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation are lifesaving interventions for HIV-infected infants. In Cameroon and Zambia, EID coverage for HIV-exposed infants (HEIs) is suboptimal and the time to ART initiation for infants infected with HIV often exc...

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Autores principales: Dougherty, Gillian, Abena, Tihnje, Abesselo, Jean Pierre, Banda, Jeane Ngala, Biyaga, Tjek Paul, Boccanera, Rodrigo, Boyd, Mary Adetinuke, Ebogo, Mesmey, Hamomba, Leoda, Jed, Suzanne, Kakanou, Zeh Florence, Kasonde, Prisca, Kasonka, Siphiwe Chilungu, Lungwebungu, Rachael, Madevu-Matson, Caitlin, Mayer, Magdalene Mange, Mwamba, Mukuka, Panya, Milembe, Sakanda, Paul, Tsiouris, Fatima, Walker, Lauren, Rabkin, Miriam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Global Health: Science and Practice 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8324201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34234027
http://dx.doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00550
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author Dougherty, Gillian
Abena, Tihnje
Abesselo, Jean Pierre
Banda, Jeane Ngala
Biyaga, Tjek Paul
Boccanera, Rodrigo
Boyd, Mary Adetinuke
Ebogo, Mesmey
Hamomba, Leoda
Jed, Suzanne
Kakanou, Zeh Florence
Kasonde, Prisca
Kasonka, Siphiwe Chilungu
Lungwebungu, Rachael
Madevu-Matson, Caitlin
Mayer, Magdalene Mange
Mwamba, Mukuka
Panya, Milembe
Sakanda, Paul
Tsiouris, Fatima
Walker, Lauren
Rabkin, Miriam
author_facet Dougherty, Gillian
Abena, Tihnje
Abesselo, Jean Pierre
Banda, Jeane Ngala
Biyaga, Tjek Paul
Boccanera, Rodrigo
Boyd, Mary Adetinuke
Ebogo, Mesmey
Hamomba, Leoda
Jed, Suzanne
Kakanou, Zeh Florence
Kasonde, Prisca
Kasonka, Siphiwe Chilungu
Lungwebungu, Rachael
Madevu-Matson, Caitlin
Mayer, Magdalene Mange
Mwamba, Mukuka
Panya, Milembe
Sakanda, Paul
Tsiouris, Fatima
Walker, Lauren
Rabkin, Miriam
author_sort Dougherty, Gillian
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Early infant diagnosis (EID) and rapid antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation are lifesaving interventions for HIV-infected infants. In Cameroon and Zambia, EID coverage for HIV-exposed infants (HEIs) is suboptimal and the time to ART initiation for infants infected with HIV often exceeds national standards despite numerous policy and training initiatives. METHODS: ICAP at Columbia University supported the Cameroon and Zambia Ministries of Health (MOHs) and local partners to implement quality improvement collaboratives (QICs) to improve EID coverage and ART initiation at 17 health facilities (HFs) in Cameroon (March 2016 to June 2017) and 15 HFs in Zambia (March 2017 to June 2018). In each country, MOH led project design and site selection. MOH and ICAP provided quality improvement training and monthly supportive supervision, which enabled HF teams to conduct root cause analyses, design and implement contextually appropriate interventions, conduct rapid tests of change, analyze monthly progress, and convene at quarterly learning sessions to compare performance and share best practices. RESULTS: In Cameroon, EID testing coverage improved from 57% (113/197 HEIs tested) during the 5-month baseline period to 80% (165/207) in the 5-month endline period. In Zambia, EID testing coverage improved from 77% (4,773/6,197) during the 12-month baseline period to 89% (2,144/2,420) during the 3-month endline period. In a comparison of the same baseline and endline periods, the return of positive test results to caregivers improved from 18% (36/196 caregivers notified) to 86% (182/211) in Cameroon and from 44% (94/214) to 79% (44/56) in Zambia. ART initiation improved from 44% (94/214 HIV-infected infants) to 80% (45/56) in Zambia; the numbers of HIV-infected infants in Cameroon were too small to detect meaningful differences. CONCLUSIONS: QICs improved coverage of timely EID and ART initiation in both countries. In addition to building quality improvement capacity and improving outcomes, the QICs resulted in a “change package” of successful initiatives that were disseminated within each country.
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spelling pubmed-83242012021-08-20 Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach Dougherty, Gillian Abena, Tihnje Abesselo, Jean Pierre Banda, Jeane Ngala Biyaga, Tjek Paul Boccanera, Rodrigo Boyd, Mary Adetinuke Ebogo, Mesmey Hamomba, Leoda Jed, Suzanne Kakanou, Zeh Florence Kasonde, Prisca Kasonka, Siphiwe Chilungu Lungwebungu, Rachael Madevu-Matson, Caitlin Mayer, Magdalene Mange Mwamba, Mukuka Panya, Milembe Sakanda, Paul Tsiouris, Fatima Walker, Lauren Rabkin, Miriam Glob Health Sci Pract Short Reports INTRODUCTION: Early infant diagnosis (EID) and rapid antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation are lifesaving interventions for HIV-infected infants. In Cameroon and Zambia, EID coverage for HIV-exposed infants (HEIs) is suboptimal and the time to ART initiation for infants infected with HIV often exceeds national standards despite numerous policy and training initiatives. METHODS: ICAP at Columbia University supported the Cameroon and Zambia Ministries of Health (MOHs) and local partners to implement quality improvement collaboratives (QICs) to improve EID coverage and ART initiation at 17 health facilities (HFs) in Cameroon (March 2016 to June 2017) and 15 HFs in Zambia (March 2017 to June 2018). In each country, MOH led project design and site selection. MOH and ICAP provided quality improvement training and monthly supportive supervision, which enabled HF teams to conduct root cause analyses, design and implement contextually appropriate interventions, conduct rapid tests of change, analyze monthly progress, and convene at quarterly learning sessions to compare performance and share best practices. RESULTS: In Cameroon, EID testing coverage improved from 57% (113/197 HEIs tested) during the 5-month baseline period to 80% (165/207) in the 5-month endline period. In Zambia, EID testing coverage improved from 77% (4,773/6,197) during the 12-month baseline period to 89% (2,144/2,420) during the 3-month endline period. In a comparison of the same baseline and endline periods, the return of positive test results to caregivers improved from 18% (36/196 caregivers notified) to 86% (182/211) in Cameroon and from 44% (94/214) to 79% (44/56) in Zambia. ART initiation improved from 44% (94/214 HIV-infected infants) to 80% (45/56) in Zambia; the numbers of HIV-infected infants in Cameroon were too small to detect meaningful differences. CONCLUSIONS: QICs improved coverage of timely EID and ART initiation in both countries. In addition to building quality improvement capacity and improving outcomes, the QICs resulted in a “change package” of successful initiatives that were disseminated within each country. Global Health: Science and Practice 2021-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8324201/ /pubmed/34234027 http://dx.doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00550 Text en © Dougherty et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly cited. To view a copy of the license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. When linking to this article, please use the following permanent link: https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00550
spellingShingle Short Reports
Dougherty, Gillian
Abena, Tihnje
Abesselo, Jean Pierre
Banda, Jeane Ngala
Biyaga, Tjek Paul
Boccanera, Rodrigo
Boyd, Mary Adetinuke
Ebogo, Mesmey
Hamomba, Leoda
Jed, Suzanne
Kakanou, Zeh Florence
Kasonde, Prisca
Kasonka, Siphiwe Chilungu
Lungwebungu, Rachael
Madevu-Matson, Caitlin
Mayer, Magdalene Mange
Mwamba, Mukuka
Panya, Milembe
Sakanda, Paul
Tsiouris, Fatima
Walker, Lauren
Rabkin, Miriam
Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title_full Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title_fullStr Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title_full_unstemmed Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title_short Improving Services for HIV-Exposed Infants in Zambia and Cameroon Using a Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach
title_sort improving services for hiv-exposed infants in zambia and cameroon using a quality improvement collaborative approach
topic Short Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8324201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34234027
http://dx.doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00550
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