Join us as patients, policy makers, and health workers describe the transformation of integrated HIV care in primary health care clinics in South Africa. Filmed and produced by Angeli Rawat
Watch the full film at https://youtu.be/UfjZeNIQAho
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Join us as patients, policy makers, and health workers describe the transformation of integrated HIV care in primary health care clinics in South Africa. Filmed and produced by Angeli Rawat
Watch the full film at https://youtu.be/UfjZeNIQAho
Presented at 6th Global Symposium on Health Systems Research, November 8-12, 2020 (Dubai-virtually due to COVID-19) Abstract below
Introduction
Pneumonia,
the leading infectious cause of death among children under 5, is diagnosed by
measuring respiratory rates (RR) in low- and middle-income settings. RR
counting has limited accuracy and high variability, especially when performed
by community health workers. Automated RR counters could improve outcomes of
childhood pneumonia in communities. The Acute Respiratory Infection Diagnostic
Aids (ARIDA) intervention trained health workers at community and facility
levels and implemented 2 automated RR counters in Ethiopia (ChARM and RAD-G).
We aimed to identify the practical ‘health system-level’ lessons from the ARIDA
implementation and provide considerations for integrating these devices into
health systems.
Methods
We
conducted key informant interviews (KIIs) with 57 diverse participants in five
regions where ARIDA was implemented. Participants represented communities,
facilities, trainers, and district management/decision makers. Data was analyzed in ATLAS.ti using thematic
content analysis. Themes were categorized using the Tanahashi bottleneck
analysis.
Results
All participants
recommended scaling up the ARIDA intervention nationally. Health workers perceived the
devices as: time saving, highly acceptable by parents and children,
facilitating accurate diagnosis and referrals and decreasing referrals to higher
level facilities. Health workers perceived an increased demand for services,
reduced numbers of sick children not seeking care and perceived decreased death
rates from pneumonia. Participants recommended increasing the numbers of
devices and health workers trained with considerations for device maintenance
and power supply. Strengthening supply chains for amoxicillin and gentamicin,
improving oxygen gas availability, and strengthening referral networks would
maximize perceived benefits. While training improved knowledge, more supportive
supervision, integration with current guidelines and more days were
recommended. Participants recommended
more guidance, budget, planning and structure related to community engagement.
Government should lead efforts to scale-up the use of ARIDA devices with inputs
from across the health system and support from implementing partners.
Conclusions
Automated
RR counters have the potential to improve decentralized childhood pneumonia
diagnosis and management within communities. Health system considerations to
ensure sustainability of scaling efforts must be prioritized. Further research
is needed on the epidemiological impact, changes to pneumonia case management
(including health seeing behavior and rational drug use) and the return on
investment of intervention.