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Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya

INTRODUCTION: In Africa almost half of healthcare services are delivered through private sector providers. These are often underused in national public health responses. To support and accelerate the public sector's COVID-19 response, we facilitated recruitment of additional private sector capa...

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Autores principales: van Duijn, Shannen, Barsosio, Hellen C., Omollo, Mevis, Milimo, Emmanuel, Akoth, Isdorah, Aroka, Robert, de Sanctis, Teresa, K'Oloo, Alloys, June, Micah J., Houben, Nathalie, Wilming, Charlotte, Otieno, Kephas, Kariuki, Simon, Onsongo, Simon, Odhiambo, Albert, Ganda, Gregory, Rinke de Wit, Tobias F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9887331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36733283
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.837215
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author van Duijn, Shannen
Barsosio, Hellen C.
Omollo, Mevis
Milimo, Emmanuel
Akoth, Isdorah
Aroka, Robert
de Sanctis, Teresa
K'Oloo, Alloys
June, Micah J.
Houben, Nathalie
Wilming, Charlotte
Otieno, Kephas
Kariuki, Simon
Onsongo, Simon
Odhiambo, Albert
Ganda, Gregory
Rinke de Wit, Tobias F.
author_facet van Duijn, Shannen
Barsosio, Hellen C.
Omollo, Mevis
Milimo, Emmanuel
Akoth, Isdorah
Aroka, Robert
de Sanctis, Teresa
K'Oloo, Alloys
June, Micah J.
Houben, Nathalie
Wilming, Charlotte
Otieno, Kephas
Kariuki, Simon
Onsongo, Simon
Odhiambo, Albert
Ganda, Gregory
Rinke de Wit, Tobias F.
author_sort van Duijn, Shannen
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In Africa almost half of healthcare services are delivered through private sector providers. These are often underused in national public health responses. To support and accelerate the public sector's COVID-19 response, we facilitated recruitment of additional private sector capacity by initiating a public-private partnership (PPP) in Kisumu County, Kenya. In this manuscript we demonstrate this PPP's performance. METHODS: COVID-19 diagnostic testing formed the basis for a PPP between Kenyan Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Department of Health Kisumu County, PharmAccess Foundation, and local faith-based and private healthcare facilities: COVID-Dx. First phase COVID-Dx was implemented from June 01, 2020, to March 31, 2021 in Kisumu County, Kenya. Trained laboratory technologists in participating healthcare facilities collected nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal samples from patients meeting the Kenyan MoH COVID-19 case definition. Healthcare workers in participating facilities collected patient clinical data using a digitized MoH COVID-19 Case Identification Form. We shared aggregated results from these data via (semi-) live dashboards with all relevant stakeholders through their mobile phones and tablets. Statistical analyses were performed using Stata 16 to inform project processes. RESULTS: Nine private facilities participated in the project. A patient trajectory was developed from case identification to result reporting, all steps supported by a semi-real time digital dashboard. A total of 4,324 PCR tests for SARS-CoV-2 were added to the public response, identifying 425 positives, accounting for 16% of all COVID-19 tests performed in the County over the given time-period. Geo-mapped and time-tagged information on incident cases was depicted on Google maps through PowerBI-dashboards and fed back to policymakers for informed rapid decision making. Preferential COVID-19 testing was performed on health workers at risk, with 1,009 tests performed (up to 43% of all County health workforce). CONCLUSION: We demonstrate feasibility of rapidly increasing the public health sector COVID-19 response through coordinated private sector efforts in an African setting. Our PPP intervention in Kisumu, Kenya was based on a joint testing strategy and demonstrated that semi-real time digitalization of patient trajectories can gain significant efficiencies, linking public and private healthcare efforts, increasing transparency, support better quality health services and informing policy makers to target interventions.
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spelling pubmed-98873312023-02-01 Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya van Duijn, Shannen Barsosio, Hellen C. Omollo, Mevis Milimo, Emmanuel Akoth, Isdorah Aroka, Robert de Sanctis, Teresa K'Oloo, Alloys June, Micah J. Houben, Nathalie Wilming, Charlotte Otieno, Kephas Kariuki, Simon Onsongo, Simon Odhiambo, Albert Ganda, Gregory Rinke de Wit, Tobias F. Front Public Health Public Health INTRODUCTION: In Africa almost half of healthcare services are delivered through private sector providers. These are often underused in national public health responses. To support and accelerate the public sector's COVID-19 response, we facilitated recruitment of additional private sector capacity by initiating a public-private partnership (PPP) in Kisumu County, Kenya. In this manuscript we demonstrate this PPP's performance. METHODS: COVID-19 diagnostic testing formed the basis for a PPP between Kenyan Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Department of Health Kisumu County, PharmAccess Foundation, and local faith-based and private healthcare facilities: COVID-Dx. First phase COVID-Dx was implemented from June 01, 2020, to March 31, 2021 in Kisumu County, Kenya. Trained laboratory technologists in participating healthcare facilities collected nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal samples from patients meeting the Kenyan MoH COVID-19 case definition. Healthcare workers in participating facilities collected patient clinical data using a digitized MoH COVID-19 Case Identification Form. We shared aggregated results from these data via (semi-) live dashboards with all relevant stakeholders through their mobile phones and tablets. Statistical analyses were performed using Stata 16 to inform project processes. RESULTS: Nine private facilities participated in the project. A patient trajectory was developed from case identification to result reporting, all steps supported by a semi-real time digital dashboard. A total of 4,324 PCR tests for SARS-CoV-2 were added to the public response, identifying 425 positives, accounting for 16% of all COVID-19 tests performed in the County over the given time-period. Geo-mapped and time-tagged information on incident cases was depicted on Google maps through PowerBI-dashboards and fed back to policymakers for informed rapid decision making. Preferential COVID-19 testing was performed on health workers at risk, with 1,009 tests performed (up to 43% of all County health workforce). CONCLUSION: We demonstrate feasibility of rapidly increasing the public health sector COVID-19 response through coordinated private sector efforts in an African setting. Our PPP intervention in Kisumu, Kenya was based on a joint testing strategy and demonstrated that semi-real time digitalization of patient trajectories can gain significant efficiencies, linking public and private healthcare efforts, increasing transparency, support better quality health services and informing policy makers to target interventions. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9887331/ /pubmed/36733283 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.837215 Text en Copyright © 2023 van Duijn, Barsosio, Omollo, Milimo, Akoth, Aroka, de Sanctis, K'Oloo, June, Houben, Wilming, Otieno, Kariuki, Onsongo, Odhiambo, Ganda and Rinke de Wit. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
van Duijn, Shannen
Barsosio, Hellen C.
Omollo, Mevis
Milimo, Emmanuel
Akoth, Isdorah
Aroka, Robert
de Sanctis, Teresa
K'Oloo, Alloys
June, Micah J.
Houben, Nathalie
Wilming, Charlotte
Otieno, Kephas
Kariuki, Simon
Onsongo, Simon
Odhiambo, Albert
Ganda, Gregory
Rinke de Wit, Tobias F.
Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title_full Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title_fullStr Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title_short Public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale COVID-19 response in Western Kenya
title_sort public-private partnership to rapidly strengthen and scale covid-19 response in western kenya
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9887331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36733283
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.837215
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