8 results on '"Abu Khader, Khadija"'
Search Results
2. Development of a targeted client communication intervention to women using an electronic maternal and child health registry: a qualitative study
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Bogale, Binyam, Mørkrid, Kjersti, O’Donnell, Brian, Ghanem, Buthaina, Abu Ward, Itimad, Abu Khader, Khadija, Isbeih, Mervett, Frost, Michael, Baniode, Mohammad, Hijaz, Taghreed, Awwad, Tamara, Rabah, Yousef, and Frøen, J. Frederik
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- 2020
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3. Gestational age recorded at delivery versus estimations using antenatal care data from the Electronic Maternal and Child Health Registry in the West Bank: a comparative analysis
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Isbeih, Mervett, Venkateswaran, Mahima, Abbas, Eatimad, Abu-Khader, Khadija, Awwad, Tamara, Baniode, Mohammad, Ghanem, Buthaina, Hijaz, Taghreed, Ramlawi, Asad, Salman, Rand, White, Richard, and Frøen, J Frederik
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- 2021
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4. Development of a targeted client communication intervention for pregnant and post-partum women: a descriptive study
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Bogale, Binyam, Mørkrid, Kjersti, O’Donnell, Brian, Ghanem, Buthaina, Abu Ward, Itimad, Abu Khader, Khadija, Isbeih, Mervett, Frost, Michael, Baniode, Mohammad, Hijaz, Taghreed, Awwad, Tamara, Rabah, Yousef, and Frøen, J Frederik
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- 2021
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5. Effective coverage of essential antenatal care interventions: A cross-sectional study of public primary healthcare clinics in the West Bank.
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Venkateswaran, Mahima, Bogale, Binyam, Abu Khader, Khadija, Awwad, Tamara, Friberg, Ingrid K., Ghanem, Buthaina, Hijaz, Taghreed, Mørkrid, Kjersti, and Frøen, J. Frederik
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PRENATAL care ,HYPERTENSION ,MEDICAL screening ,INFORMATION science - Abstract
Background: The proportion of women attending four or more antenatal care (ANC) visits is widely used for monitoring, but provides limited information on quality of care. Effective coverage metrics, assessing if ANC interventions are completely delivered, can identify critical gaps in healthcare service delivery. We aimed to measure coverage of at least one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions in the public health system in the West Bank, Palestine, and to explore associations between infrastructure-related and maternal sociodemographic variables and effective coverage. Methods: We used data from paper-based clinical records of 1369 pregnant women attending ANC in 17 primary healthcare clinics. Infrastructure-related variables were derived from a 2014 national inventory assessment of clinics. Sample size calculations were made to detect effective coverage ranging 40–60% with a 2–3% margin of error, clinics were selected by probability sampling. We calculated inverse probability weighted percentages of: effective coverage of appropriate number and timing of screenings of ANC interventions; and coverage of at least one screening. Results: Coverage of one screening and effective coverage of ANC interventions were notably different for screening for: hypertension (98% vs. 10%); fetal growth abnormalities (66% vs. 6%); anemia (93% vs. 14%); gestational diabetes (93% vs. 34%), and antenatal ultrasound (74% vs. 24%). Clinics with a laboratory and ultrasound generally performed better in terms of effective coverage, and maternal sociodemographic factors had no associations with effective coverage estimates. Only 13% of the women attended ANC visits according to the recommended national schedule, driving effective coverage down. Conclusion: Indicators for ANC monitoring and their definitions can have important consequences for quantifying health system performance and identifying issues with care provision. To achieve more effective coverage in public primary care clinics in the West Bank, efforts should be made to improve care provision according to prescribed guidelines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Comparing individual-level clinical data from antenatal records with routine health information systems indicators for antenatal care in the West Bank: A cross-sectional study.
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Venkateswaran, Mahima, Mørkrid, Kjersti, Abu Khader, Khadija, Awwad, Tamara, Friberg, Ingrid K., Ghanem, Buthaina, Hijaz, Taghreed, and Frøen, J. Frederik
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MEDICAL informatics ,POINT-of-care testing ,HEALTH status indicators ,CHILDREN'S health - Abstract
Background: In most low- and middle-income settings, national aggregate health data is the most consistently available source for policy-making and international comparisons. In the West Bank, the paper-based health information system with manual aggregations is transitioning to an individual-level data eRegistry for maternal and child health at the point-of-care. The aim of this study was to explore beforehand how routine health information systems indicators for antenatal care can change with the introduction of the eRegistry. Methods: Data were collected from clinical antenatal paper records of pregnancy enrollments for 2015 from 17 primary healthcare clinics, selected by probability sampling from five districts in the West Bank. We used the individual-level data from clinical records to generate routinely reported health systems indicators. We weighted the data to produce population-level estimates, and compared these indicators with aggregate routine health information systems reports. Results: Antenatal anemia screening at 36 weeks was 20% according to the clinical records data, compared to 52% in the routine reports. The clinical records data showed considerably higher incidences of key maternal conditions compared to the routine reports, including fundal height discrepancy (20% vs. 0.01%); Rh-negative blood group (6.8% vs. 1.4%); anemia with hemoglobin<9.5 g/dl (6% vs. 0.6%); and malpresentation at term (1.3% vs. 0.03%). Only about a sixth of cases with these conditions were referred according to guidelines to designated referral clinics. Conclusions: Differences between indicators from the clinical records data and routine health information systems reports can be attributed to human error, inconsistent denominators, and complexities of data processes. Key health systems indicators were prone to underestimations since their registration was dependent on referral of pregnant women. With a transition to individual-level data, as in the eRegistry under implementation, the public health authorities will be able to generate reliable health systems indicators reflective of the population’s health status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. eRegTime-Time Spent on Health Information Management in Primary Health Care Clinics Using a Digital Health Registry Versus Paper-Based Documentation: Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Venkateswaran M, Nazzal Z, Ghanem B, Khraiwesh R, Abbas E, Abu Khader K, Awwad T, Hijaz T, Isbeih M, Mørkrid K, Rose CJ, and Frøen JF
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Background: Digital health interventions have been shown to improve data quality and health services in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Nonetheless, in LMICs, systematic assessments of time saved with the use of digital tools are rare. We ran a set of cluster-randomized controlled trials as part of the implementation of a digital maternal and child health registry (eRegistry) in the West Bank, Palestine., Objective: In the eRegTime study, we compared time spent on health information management in clinics that use the eRegistry versus the existing paper-based documentation system., Methods: Intervention (eRegistry) and control (paper documentation) arms were defined by a stratified random subsample of primary health care clinics from the concurrent eRegQual trial. We used time-motion methodology to collect data on antenatal care service provision. Four observers used handheld tablets to record time-use data during one working day per clinic. We estimated relative time spent on health information management for booking and follow-up visits and on client care using mixed-effects linear regression., Results: In total, 22 of the 24 included clinics (12 intervention, 10 control) contributed data; no antenatal care visits occurred in the other two clinics during the study period. A total of 123 and 118 consultations of new pregnancy registrations and follow-up antenatal care visits were observed in the intervention and control groups, respectively. Average time spent on health information management for follow-up antenatal care visits in eRegistry clinics was 5.72 minutes versus 8.10 minutes in control clinics (adjusted relative time 0.69, 95% CI 0.60-0.79; P<.001), and 15.26 minutes versus 18.91 minutes (adjusted relative time 0.96, 95% CI 0.61-1.50; P=.85) for booking visits. The average time spent on documentation, a subcategory of health information management, was 5.50 minutes in eRegistry clinics versus 8.48 minutes in control clinics (adjusted relative time 0.68, 95% CI 0.56-0.83; P<.001). While the average time spent on client care was 5.01 minutes in eRegistry clinics versus 4.91 minutes in control clinics, some uncertainty remains, and the CI was consistent with eRegistry clinics using less, the same, or more time on client care compared to those that use paper (adjusted relative time 0.85, 95% CI 0.64-1.13; P=.27)., Conclusions: The eRegistry captures digital data at point of care during client consultations and generates automated routine reports based on the clinical data entered. Markedly less time (plausibly a saving of at least 18%) was spent on health information management in eRegistry clinics compared to those that use paper-based documentation. This is likely explained by the fact that the eRegistry requires lesser repetitive documentation work than paper-based systems. Adoption of eRegistry-like systems in comparable settings may save valuable and scarce health care resources., Trial Registration: ISRCTN registry ISRCTN18008445; https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN18008445., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): RR2-10.2196/13653., (©Mahima Venkateswaran, Zaher Nazzal, Buthaina Ghanem, Reham Khraiwesh, Eatimad Abbas, Khadija Abu Khader, Tamara Awwad, Taghreed Hijaz, Mervett Isbeih, Kjersti Mørkrid, Christopher James Rose, J Frederik Frøen. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 13.05.2022.)
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- 2022
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8. eRegTime, Efficiency of Health Information Management Using an Electronic Registry for Maternal and Child Health: Protocol for a Time-Motion Study in a Cluster Randomized Trial.
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Lindberg MH, Venkateswaran M, Abu Khader K, Awwad T, Ghanem B, Hijaz T, Mørkrid K, and Frøen JF
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Background: Paper-based routine health information systems often require repetitive data entry. In the West Bank, the primary health care system for maternal and child health was entirely paper-based, with care providers spending considerable amounts of time maintaining multiple files and client registers. As part of the phased national implementation of an electronic health information system, some of the primary health care clinics are now using an electronic registry (eRegistry) for maternal and child health. The eRegistry consists of client-level data entered by care providers at the point-of-care and supports several digital health interventions that are triggered by the documented clinical data, including guideline-based clinical decision support and automated public health reports., Objective: The aim of the eRegTime study is to investigate whether the use of the eRegistry leads to changes in time-efficiency in health information management by the care providers, compared with the paper-based systems., Methods: This is a substudy in a cluster randomized controlled trial (the eRegQual study) and uses the time-motion observational study design. The primary outcome is the time spent on health information management for antenatal care, informed and defined by workflow mapping in the clinics. We performed sample size estimations to enable the detection of a 25% change in time-efficiency with a 90% power using an intracluster correlation coefficient of 0.1 and an alpha of .05. We observed care providers for full workdays in 24 randomly selected primary health care clinics-12 using the eRegistry and 12 still using paper. Linear mixed effects models will be used to compare the time spent on health information management per client per care provider., Results: Although the objective of the eRegQual study is to assess the effectiveness of the eRegistry in improving quality of antenatal care, the results of the eRegTime study will contribute to process evaluation, supplementing the findings of the larger trial., Conclusions: Electronic health tools are expected to reduce workload for the care providers and thus improve efficiency of clinical work. To achieve these benefits, the implementation of such systems requires both integration with existing workflows and the creation of new workflows. Studies assessing the time-efficiency of electronic health information systems can inform policy decisions for implementations in resource-limited low- and middle-income settings., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/13653., (©Marie Hella Lindberg, Mahima Venkateswaran, Khadija Abu Khader, Tamara Awwad, Buthaina Ghanem, Taghreed Hijaz, Kjersti Mørkrid, J Frederik Frøen. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 07.08.2019.)
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- 2019
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