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Nompilo Study: Quality Improvement Intervention Hloli Ngidi, MA 20,000+ Partnership, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Presenting on behalf of the Nompilo Study Team: C. Horwood , W. Ngidi , M. Grant, J. Reddy, P. Barker, L. Butler and N. Rollins.
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Nompilo Study: Quality Improvement InterventionHloli Ngidi, MA20,000+ Partnership, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Presenting on behalf of the Nompilo Study Team: C. Horwood, W. Ngidi, M. Grant, J. Reddy, P. Barker, L. Butler and N. Rollins
SA has embraced community health workers (CHW) as a vital part of its health system; • CHWs expected to provide a package of community-based maternal, newborn and child health and nutrition services, working as part of ward-based primary health care outreach teams; • ~ 10,600 CHWs in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Need for effective methods to improve uptake of evidence-based interventions to reduce maternal and infant mortality
How can we best utilize the pool of CWH to improve both MNCHN/PMTCT outcomes? • All CHWs have received basic training in maternal & child health, but coverage and quality of training is variable; • Need for updated training for the CHW on MNCHN/PMTCT; • Need continued support – but limited evidence regarding best strategy for providing support and supervision to CHWs. Recognized Questions and Needs
No standardized supervision approach for CHW; • No feedback mechanism for CHW; • Quality Improvement (QI) methodology has been implemented to improve the delivery of healthcare services in South Africa – not previously tested with CHWs Rationale for Intervention
Implementing integrated community case management training & QI support to CHWs: • Is it feasible? • Does it lead to gains in CHW knowledge, self-efficacy and practice? • What is the effect on infant feeding practices, and uptake of PMTCT and MCH services? Research Questions
Enhanced, data-driven supervisory approach • peer-to-peer learning networks of CHWs and their supervisors • twice a month to review process and output data • Flexible, local adaptation, highly participatory • Evidenced-based tools aimed at rapid-cycle iterative testing of changes Intervention
1. Data driven improvement • Build a common goal • Agree on set of targets that are clear and practical • Identify data to feedback to CHWs to reflect their day to day activities • 2. Effective supervision • Clearly identifying roles and responsibilities of supervisors • Supervisor meetings to empower/strengthen their supervisory skills • 'Study mentors' groom supervisors so they lead improvement work • 3. Accelerate learning through collaboration • Team meetings (1 supervisor with 4 CHWs) • Groups share lessons learned similar focus on data • Encourage linkages in communities QI Plan
3 day training for team leaders and 1 CHW per team • Led by professional nurses with QI training • High facilitator to participant ratio: 1:10 • Content: • Leading and facilitating teams • Use of QI tools – e.g., root cause and bottleneck analysis, mapping processes, PDSA • Information / data usage • Twice monthly mentorship team meetings by expert QI facilitators with CHW teams • Collaborative learning sessions: 3 over 15 months Continuous Quality Improvement
Facilitators and facilitation techniques were seen as central to the learning session process • Participants felt they were afforded an opportunity to share and learn different and new ways of identifying pregnant women and mothers from other CHWs and they could also see how their work was going in general • One highlight mentioned was that of having a member of DoH present which meant that CHWs were able to share any challenges directly with them • Supported and mentored after the trainings Learning Session / Mentorship
“Because you are now more knowledgeable and you carry a lot of tools that assist you with your work, the timers, and thermometers; and you know which temperature requires a referral to the clinic... … previously we did not have any tools when we visited people’s homes. You would just tell a person to keep their house tidy and other such things. You could not do anything for them; if they told you that a person is sick you would not be able to do anything for them. All we did was come to clean that person once they were bedridden and could not do anything for themselves” (S08C03) CHW felt empowered with knowledge
Simplified data driven approach can be implemented effectively with CHWs; • CHWs attended • CHWs expressed their increased sense of self worth and professionalism • CHWs liked it! • Considerable effort was needed to establish the QI supervision approach; • Without supervision, QI or other supervision approaches, investment in training may not yield the same results Conclusion