440 likes | 632 Views
Respectful Maternity Care implementation research in Tanzania: The Staha Project. GWU Miliken School of Public Health June 24, 2014. modeling of D&A behaviours in training. infrastructure weaknesses. lack of recognition for good performance. medicine and supplies stockouts.
E N D
Respectful Maternity Care implementation research in Tanzania: The StahaProject GWU Miliken School of Public Health June 24, 2014
modeling of D&A behaviours in training infrastructure weaknesses lack of recognition for good performance medicine and supplies stockouts health workers don’t know their rights AIM: REDUCE D&A health worker burnout & demotivation ethics lack of safe channels to report D&A unfair processes in the health system stress of maternity assignment distrust between providers and clients weak accountability POWER DYNAMICS organizational culture in the health system provocation by relatives community doesn’t know their rights discrepancy between policy promises and reality workforce shortages
Pre-intervention qualitative data: Patient-provider interactions • Misunderstandings about what is the health workers’ fault and what is due to system constraints • Community distrust health workers, think that they steal medicines and sell in their own pharmacies • Health providers distrust community, think that they don’t understand what actually happened/are ignorant • Good interactions exist outside the work environment (as neighbors or at social events), but changes at facility • Nurses are typically blamed • Neither patients nor providers feel that they know their rights
Values driven process: Mutuality of respect Providers RESPECT Patients Respectful Health System Environment
Participatory planning Propose and review potential solutions • Preliminary results, identification of root causes, brainstorm solutions • Stakeholders across levels: • National • Regional • District • Facility • Community Community members Community members Village and ward leaders Represent-atives from local groups Health workers in the maternity Health workers in the maternity District and facility management
Staha Change Process • Client Service Charter • Adapt the national charter in a participatory process at district and health facility level to elaborate the value of mutual respect • Facility-based quality improvement • maternity teams address issues related to mutual respect and devise ways to implement and measure change • Community and health system management actions • Communities implement and monitor activities to support providers and ensure accountability • District leaders and managers change practices to support an environment of respect and attention for providers and patients
Consensus building on norms and standards Improved outcomes Multi-level activation of mutual respect norms Increased mutual respect District and facility management policy and practice changes District-level adaptation of charter Facility- level adaptation of charter Norms and standards of mutual respect Facility-based QI process to change environment/ practice Community-driven actions to support and monitor system Increased facility-based delivery Reduced D&A during childbirth STAHA CHANGE PROCESS
Implementation research strategy • Based on: • Damschroder et al’s Consolidated Framework for Advancing Implementation Science (CFIR) • Carroll et al’s Framework for Implementation Fidelity • Overall goal of studying and uncovering the process of the implementation under key domains: • Moderators of change • Support mechanisms • Context and inner/outer settings • Fidelity
Client Service Charter • National charter developed in 2005, never adapted at district levels • Korogwe is the first district to adapt charter to reflect local needs and concerns • District charter developed first, followed by facility-specific charters • Mechanism to open dialogue between different levels of district health system and communities
Steps in local charter adaptation At district & facility levels: • Select charter committee • Review MoHSW/existing charter • Develop new draft of charter • Solicit feedback from multiple stakeholders through comment forms & community meetings • Integrate comments in charter • Seek approval by District Council • Disseminate, implement & monitor • Make revisions as needed
Frequent Comments on Draft • More transparency of fees and services • Services should be provided in a timely manner • Make providers’ rights more specific • Facilities should be a corruption-free environment • Use respectful language when speaking to patients
Key messages in the charter • Mutuality of respect • Patient rights & responsibilities • Provider rights & responsibilities • Standards of service, including relationships • Standards of ethical conduct • Accountability, feedback and complaint mechanisms • Equality and respect for all • Ongoing maintenance of charter
Dissemination and Activation • Materials developed to support dissemination • Printed copies of charters • Summaries of key provider and patient rights and responsibilities • Posters • Meetings with key leaders at district, health facility and community levels • Training on dissemination of charter • Plans and commitments for charter activation
Quality Improvement Process • Views disrespect and abuse as a systemic problem rather than an individual or behavioral problem • Applies a clinical quality improvement framework to an interpersonal quality of care issue (adapts Institute of Healthcare Improvement framework)
Intervention launch at Magunga Hospital, Korogwe District • 2-day workshop to introduce QI to the maternity ward and key personnel from RCH, theatre, and pharmacy • Staff identified drivers of D&A and proposed specific interventions for change • 6 people chosen by their peers as the QI team: • 1 doctor from the maternity ward • 2 nurses from the maternity ward • 1 pharmacist • 1 nurse from RCH • 1 nurse from theatre • The regional MOH QI specialist and the deputy medical officer in charge at the hospital supervised the team
Quality Improvement Interventions • Move admission and discharge to a private room • Obtain/use curtains in the delivery room and screens in the maternity for privacy • Pharmacy creates a stock out list each week to post in the maternity ward • Recognize providers with tea, certificates, etc. • Peer-to-peer learning with Bombo Hospital QI Team
QI Intervention: Implementation research • Self-reported exit survey of all postpartum women on quality of care and satisfaction with interaction with providers
Patient surveys: analysis • N = 1720, 43 weeks of data from August 2013-April 2014 (ongoing) • Two weeks of baseline data collection • Data divided into pre-post intervention at week 19 • All interventions implemented by week 15 • At week 19, providers started to use a checklist per patient to ensure that interventions were followed
Patient surveys: logistic regression analysis • Outcome categorized as excellent vs. other categories • Main predictor: pre/post 19 weeks • Controlled for age and clustered on date
Overall quality of care Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Respect Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Privacy Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Provider language Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Provider communication Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Availability of supplies Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Provider knowledge Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Ward cleanliness Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Other events in maternity ward: example – overall quality of care Weeks 27-29: staff shortage Week 24: nurse changes Week 18: nursing students start Week 3: Admission/discharge moved Week 8: Curtains for delivery cubicles Week 10: Screens in maternity ward for exams Week 15: Posting of supplies/drugs available Week 19: Checklist of interventions
Patient surveys: regression results P-value: *<0.05, **<0.01, ***<0.001
Challenges to implementation • Interventions that require funds or approval by hospital management can take longer to implement • Maternity ward staff who did not attend the QI training were less able to explain the process and its importance • Documentation/monitoring of interventions can be difficult due to poor record-keeping at the maternity ward • Some women express concern when using moveable screens in the maternity ward that being covered during examination implies serious illness
Limitations of findings • Preliminary results not adjusted for time trends • Trend could be due to something other than intervention (ex: availability of supplies) • Positivity effect: women could be rating everything as positive overall • Women have changed over time? • No comparison group
Implications for future Staha research • End line survey to see if intervention is having an effect on D&A
Moderators of change: key questions • How have key stakeholders contributed to the implementation/intervention? • How did participants of the intervention react to and accept the intervention? • How has the perception of disrespect and abuse changed over time? • What is the role of the health providers’ collective efficacy in facilitating change? • How have the power dynamics between patients and providers changed?
Moderators of change: data components • Charter process: • Personal narration by charter facilitator • In-depth interviews with key stakeholders • Participant observations • QI process: • In-depth interviews with key stakeholders • FGDs with health providers • Patient exit survey • Provider survey • Provider collective efficacy survey
Support mechanisms • Key question: • To what extent did the Staha team itself affect the outcome of the intervention? For example, what occurred/may not have occurred without the support and facilitation of the implementers/researchers? • Data component: • Project documents • Qualitative interviews
Fidelity • Key questions: • To what extent is the intervention being implemented as intended? • What were the challenges to implementation? What elements of the intervention were adapted during the implementation in order to react to the realities on the ground? • Data components: • Project documents, meeting minutes • Qualitative interviews with key stakeholders and participants • Observations
Context: inner/outer settings • Key question: • How do the social, economic, structural, and political factors of the intervention district, including of the targeted intervention community and of the health facilities, affect the implementation and the intervention outcome? • Data components: • Qualitative interviews with key stakeholders • Landscape scanning
Charter Process: Preliminary lessons • Charter committee representation from district government and health system and community • D&A in childbirth as lens onto broader quality issues – touches on many encounters with the health system • Building consensus • Allow space for airing contentious issues • Gradual consensus building from disparate perspectives • System insiders open to new possibilities; recognize value of community perspectives • Community representatives made aware of structural/capacity limitations; recognize their own power to make change • Local government leaders start recognize their role in ensuring quality of health services for their populations