69 results on '"Arsenault C"'
Search Results
2. Residential dual core energy recovery ventilation system for ventilation of northern housing
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Ouazia, B, primary, Won, D., additional, Arsenault, C, additional, and Li, Y, additional
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- 2019
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3. High-quality health systems in the Sustainable Development Goals era: time for a revolution
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Kruk, ME, Gage, AD, Arsenault, C, Jordan, K, Leslie, HH, Roder-DeWan, S, Adeyi, O, Barker, P, Daelmans, B, Doubova, SV, English, M, Garcia Elorrio, E, Guanais, F, Gureje, O, Hirschhorn, LR, Jiang, L, Kelley, E, Lemango, ET, Liljestrand, J, Malata, A, Marchant, T, Matsoso, MP, Meara, JG, Mohanan, M, Ndiaye, Y, Norheim, OF, Reddy, KS, Rowe, AK, Salomon, JA, Thapa, G, Twum-Danso, NAY, Pate, M, Kruk, ME, Gage, AD, Arsenault, C, Jordan, K, Leslie, HH, Roder-DeWan, S, Adeyi, O, Barker, P, Daelmans, B, Doubova, SV, English, M, Garcia Elorrio, E, Guanais, F, Gureje, O, Hirschhorn, LR, Jiang, L, Kelley, E, Lemango, ET, Liljestrand, J, Malata, A, Marchant, T, Matsoso, MP, Meara, JG, Mohanan, M, Ndiaye, Y, Norheim, OF, Reddy, KS, Rowe, AK, Salomon, JA, Thapa, G, Twum-Danso, NAY, and Pate, M
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- 2018
4. Perioperative mortality rates in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Ng-Kamstra, JS, Arya, S, Greenberg, SLM, Kotagal, M, Arsenault, C, Ljungman, D, Yorlets, RR, Agarwal, A, Frankfurter, C, Nikouline, A, Lai, FYX, Palmqvist, CL, Fu, T, Mahmood, T, Raju, S, Sharma, S, Marks, IH, Bowder, A, Pi, L, Meara, JG, Shrime, MG, Ng-Kamstra, JS, Arya, S, Greenberg, SLM, Kotagal, M, Arsenault, C, Ljungman, D, Yorlets, RR, Agarwal, A, Frankfurter, C, Nikouline, A, Lai, FYX, Palmqvist, CL, Fu, T, Mahmood, T, Raju, S, Sharma, S, Marks, IH, Bowder, A, Pi, L, Meara, JG, and Shrime, MG
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery proposed the perioperative mortality rate (POMR) as one of the six key indicators of the strength of a country's surgical system. Despite its widespread use in high-income settings, few studies have described procedure-specific POMR across low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). We aimed to estimate POMR across a wide range of surgical procedures in LMICs. We also describe how POMR is defined and reported in the LMIC literature to provide recommendations for future monitoring in resource-constrained settings. METHODS: We did a systematic review of studies from LMICs published from 2009 to 2014 reporting POMR for any surgical procedure. We extracted select variables in duplicate from each included study and pooled estimates of POMR by type of procedure using random-effects meta-analysis of proportions and the Freeman-Tukey double arcsine transformation to stabilise variances. RESULTS: We included 985 studies conducted across 83 LMICs, covering 191 types of surgical procedures performed on 1 020 869 patients. Pooled POMR ranged from less than 0.1% for appendectomy, cholecystectomy and caesarean delivery to 20%-27% for typhoid intestinal perforation, intracranial haemorrhage and operative head injury. We found no consistent associations between procedure-specific POMR and Human Development Index (HDI) or income-group apart from emergency peripartum hysterectomy POMR, which appeared higher in low-income countries. Inpatient mortality was the most commonly used definition, though only 46.2% of studies explicitly defined the time frame during which deaths accrued. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to improve access to surgical care in LMICs should be accompanied by investment in improving the quality and safety of care. To improve the usefulness of POMR as a safety benchmark, standard reporting items should be included with any POMR estimate. Choosing a basket of procedures for which POMR is tracked may offer institutions a
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- 2018
5. Equity measurement in the post-2015: a systematic analysis of inequalities in vaccination coverage in GAVI-supported countries
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Arsenault, C., primary, Harper, S., additional, Nandi, A., additional, Rodríguez, J. M. Mendoza, additional, Hansen, P., additional, and Johri, M., additional
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- 2016
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6. Health care professionals' comprehension of the legal status of end-of-life practices in Quebec: study of clinical scenarios
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Marcoux, I., Boivin, A., Arsenault, C., Toupin, M., Youssef, J., Marcoux, I., Boivin, A., Arsenault, C., Toupin, M., and Youssef, J.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 155397.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access), OBJECTIVE: To determine health care professionals' understanding of the current legal status of different end-of-life practices and their future legal status if medical aid in dying were legalized, and to identify factors associated with misunderstanding surrounding the current legal status. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey using 6 clinical scenarios developed from a validated European questionnaire and from a validated classification of end-of-life practices. SETTING: Quebec. PARTICIPANTS: Health care professionals (physicians and nurses). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Perceptions of the current legal status of the given scenarios and whether or not the practices would be authorized in the event that medical aid in dying were legalized. RESULTS: Among the respondents (n = 271, response rate 88.0%), more than 98% knew that the administration or prescription of lethal medication was currently illegal. However, 45.8% wrongly thought that it was not permitted to withdraw a potentially life-prolonging treatment at the patient's request, and this misconception was more common among nurses and professionals who had received their diplomas longer ago. Only 39.5% believed that, in the event that medical aid in dying were legalized, the use of lethal medication would be permitted at the patient's request, and 34.6% believed they would be able to give such medication to an incompetent patient upon a relative's request. CONCLUSION: Health care professionals knew which medical practices were illegal, but some wrongly believed that current permitted practices were not legal. There were various interpretations of what would or would not be allowed if medical aid in dying were legalized. Education on the clinical implications of end-of-life practice legislation should be promoted.
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- 2015
7. Performance of a CO2-based demand controlled dual core energy recovery ventilation system for northern housing experiencing varying occupancy
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Ouazia Boualem, Arsenault Chantal, Brhane Sador, Lefebvre Daniel, Nong Gang, Mancini Sandra, and Tardif Patrique
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Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Indoor air quality and health are major areas of concern in northern and remote communities where homes experience varying occupancy, often overcrowding and are influenced by ventilation. Heat/energy recovery ventilators installed in the north are selected to provide required minimum ventilation rate set by ventilation standards (ASHRAE 62.2, etc.). Northern overcrowded homes become under-ventilated, leading to deteriorated IAQ, mold and health-related problems. This paper present results from a side-by-side testing of a CO2-based demand-controlled ERV versus a constant air flows ERV, using twin houses with simulated occupancies. The control strategy was based on the difference in CO2-concentration between exhaust/return air from the house and outdoor air. The implemented strategy based on a CO2 sensor network connected with an ERV continuously exhausting stale air from kitchen and bathrooms was simple and efficient in adjusting ventilation rate based on occupancy rate. The CO2-based demand-controlled ERV provided a much better control of indoor CO2 concentrations in the main floor and master bedroom, and with lower CO2 concentrations in bedrooms during night time, compared to the reference house with concentrations exceeding 2000 ppm. However, the CO2-based demand-controlled ERV had higher power consumption than conventional ERV with constant air flows.
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- 2023
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8. The maternal and newborn health eCohort to track longitudinal care quality: study protocol and survey development.
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Arsenault C, Wright K, Taddele T, Tadele A, Derseh Mebratie A, Tiruneh Tiyare F, Kosgei RJ, Nzinga J, Holt B, Mugenya I, Clarke-Deelder E, Nega A, Prabhakaran D, Mohan S, Mfeka-Nkabinde NG, Mthethwa L, Haile Mariam D, Molla G, Getachew T, Jarhyan P, Chaudhry M, Kassa M, and Kruk ME
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- Humans, Female, Infant, Newborn, Longitudinal Studies, Pregnancy, Infant Health, Maternal Health Services standards, Maternal Health Services organization & administration, Adult, Health Care Surveys, Prenatal Care standards, Prenatal Care organization & administration, Maternal-Child Health Services standards, Maternal-Child Health Services organization & administration, Quality of Health Care standards
- Abstract
The MNH eCohort was developed to fill gaps in maternal and newborn health (MNH) care quality measurement. In this paper, we describe the survey development process, recruitment strategy, data collection procedures, survey content and plans for analysis of the data generated by the study. We also compare the survey content to that of existing multi-country tools on MNH care quality. The eCohort is a longitudinal mixed-mode (in-person and phone) survey that will recruit women in health facilities at their first antenatal care (ANC) visit. Women will be followed via phone survey until 10-12 weeks postpartum. User-reported information will be complemented with data from physical health assessments at baseline and endline, extraction from MNH cards, and a brief facility survey. The final MNH eCohort instrument is centered around six key domains of high-quality health systems including competent care (content of ANC, delivery, and postnatal care for the mother and newborn), competent systems (prevention and detection, timely care, continuity, integration), user experience, health outcomes, confidence in the health system, and economic outcomes. The eCohort combines the maternal and newborn experience and, due to its longitudinal nature, will allow for quality assessment according to specific risks that evolve throughout the pregnancy and postpartum period. Detailed information on medical and obstetric history and current health status of respondents and newborns will allow us to determine whether women and newborns at risk are receiving needed care. The MNH eCohort will answer novel questions to guide health system improvements and to fill data gaps in implementing countries.
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- 2024
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9. So the Bone Flap Hit the Floor, Now What? An In Vitro Comparison of Cadaveric Bone Flap Decontamination Procedures.
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Marion A, Lévesque S, Touchette C, Villeneuve SA, Huppé-Gignac B, Martin P, Arsenault C, and Iorio-Morin C
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Over the course of their career, 66% of neurosurgeons will witness someone accidentally dropping a bone flap on the floor during a craniotomy procedure. Although this event is rare, it can have significant consequences for the patient, and little literature is available to guide management of this complication. Our objective was to compare 5 bone flap decontamination protocols for efficacy in reducing bacterial load, with the goal of safely reimplanting the dropped flap., Methods: Cadaveric human bone flaps were contaminated with common operating room (OR) contaminant bacteria. The bone flaps were then subject to 1 of 5 decontamination protocols: washing in saline, mechanical debridement, washing in antibiotics, washing in alcoholic chlorhexidine antiseptic, and flash decontamination in autoclave. Inoculum from the flaps was then used to grow bacteria in petri dishes, and bacterial load after decontamination was assessed. Some flaps were physically dropped on an OR floor to simulate and evaluate a real-life contamination., Results: The observed contamination from a flap dropped on an OR floor can be significant (up to 1070 colony-forming units cultured per flap). All protocols tested decreased bacterial load of the bone flaps to different degrees: saline by 95.7%, mechanical debridement by 97.5%, antibiotic bath by 99.5%, alcoholic chlorhexidine by 99.9%, and flash sterilization by 100.0%. Flash sterilization led to significant alterations in the flap's physical appearance., Conclusion: In the event of the accidental fall of a bone flap, decontamination by rinsing in an alcohol-chlorhexidine solution followed by 3 successive washes in saline seemed to provide the best balance between effectiveness, safety, and complexity of the method., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.)
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- 2024
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10. A comprehensive assessment of care competence and maternal experience of first antenatal care visits in Mexico: Insights from the baseline survey of an observational cohort study.
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Doubova SV, Quinzaños Fresnedo C, Paredes Cruz M, Perez-Moran D, Pérez-Cuevas R, Meneses Gallardo V, Garcia Cortes LR, Cerda Mancillas MC, Martínez Gaytan V, Romero Garcia MA, Espinoza Anrubio G, Perez Ruiz CE, Prado-Aguilar CA, Sarralde Delgado A, Kruk ME, and Arsenault C
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- Humans, Female, Mexico, Adult, Pregnancy, Cross-Sectional Studies, Young Adult, Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Clinical Competence, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Prenatal Care
- Abstract
Background: Comprehensive antenatal care (ANC) must prioritize competent, evidence-based medical attention to ensure a positive experience and value for its users. Unfortunately, there is scarce evidence of implementing this holistic approach to ANC in low- and middle-income countries, leading to gaps in quality and accountability. This study assessed care competence, women's experiences during the first ANC visit, and the factors associated with these care attributes., Methods and Findings: The study analyzed cross-sectional baseline data from the maternal eCohort study conducted in Mexico from August to December 2023. The study adapted the Quality Evidence for Health System Transformation (QuEST) network questionnaires to the Mexican context and validated them through expert group and cognitive interviews with women. Pregnant women aged 18 to 49 who had their first ANC visit with a family physician were enrolled in 48 primary clinics of the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social across 8 states. Care competence and women's experiences with care were the primary outcomes. The statistical analysis comprised descriptive statistics, multivariable linear and Poisson regressions. A total of 1,390 pregnant women were included in the study. During their first ANC visit, women received only 67.7% of necessary clinical actions on average, and 52% rated their ANC experience as fair or poor. Women with previous pregnancies (adjusted regression coefficient [aCoef.] -3.55; (95% confidence intervals [95% CIs]): -4.88, -2.22, p < 0.001), at risk of depression (aCoef. -3.02; 95% CIs: -5.61, -0.43, p = 0.023), those with warning signs (aCoef. -2.84; 95% CIs: -4.65, -1.03, p = 0.003), common pregnancy discomforts (aCoef. -1.91; 95% CIs: -3.81, -0.02, p = 0.048), or those who had a visit duration of less than 20 minutes (<15 minutes: aCoef. -7.58; 95% CIs: -10.21, -4.95, p < 0.001 and 15 to 19 minutes: aCoef. -2.73; 95% CIs: -4.79, -0.67, p = 0.010) and received ANC in the West and Southeast regions (aCoef. -5.15; 95% CIs: -7.64, -2.66, p < 0.001 and aCoef. -5.33; 95% CIs: -7.85, -2.82, p < 0.001, respectively) had a higher probability of experiencing poorer care competence. Higher care competence (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 1.004; 95% CIs:1.002, 1.005, p < 0.001) and receiving care in a small clinic (aPR 1.19; 95% CIs: 1.06, 1.34, p = 0.003) compared to a medium-sized clinic were associated with a better first ANC visit experience, while common pregnancy discomforts (aPR 0.94; 95% CIs: 0.89, 0.98, p = 0.005) and shorter visit length (aPR 0.94; 95% CIs: 0.88, 0.99, p = 0.039) were associated with lower women's experience. The primary limitation of the study is that participants' responses may be influenced by social desirability bias, leading them to provide socially acceptable responses., Conclusions: We found important gaps in adherence to ANC standards and that care competence during the first ANC visit is an important predictor of positive user experience. To inform quality improvement efforts, IMSS should institutionalize the routine monitoring of ANC competencies and ANC user experience. This will help identify poorly performing facilities and providers and address gaps in the provision of evidence-based and women-centered care., Competing Interests: MEK is a member of the Editorial Board of PLOS Medicine. SVD, CQF, MPC, DPM, VMG, LRGC, MCCM, VMG, MARG, GEA, CEPR, CAPA, and ASD are employed by the IMSS, yet IMSS played no role in the design and conduct of the study, in the collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data, or in the preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript. RPC and CA have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Doubova et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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11. Antenatal care quality and detection of risk among pregnant women: An observational study in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa.
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Arsenault C, Mfeka-Nkabinde NG, Chaudhry M, Jarhyan P, Taddele T, Mugenya I, Sabwa S, Wright K, Amboko B, Baensch L, Molla Wondim G, Mthethwa L, Clarke-Deelder E, Yang WC, Kosgei RJ, Purohit P, Mzolo NC, Derseh Mebratie A, Shaw S, Nega A, Tlou B, Fink G, Moshabela M, Prabhakaran D, Mohan S, Haile Mariam D, Nzinga J, Getachew T, and Kruk ME
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Ethiopia epidemiology, India epidemiology, Adult, South Africa epidemiology, Kenya epidemiology, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Quality of Health Care standards, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications diagnosis, Adolescent, Prenatal Care
- Abstract
Background: Antenatal care (ANC) is an essential platform to improve maternal and newborn health (MNH). While several articles have described the content of ANC in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), few have investigated the quality of detection and management of pregnancy risk factors during ANC. It remains unclear whether women with pregnancy risk factors receive targeted management and additional ANC., Methods and Findings: This observational study uses baseline data from the MNH eCohort study conducted in 8 sites in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa from April 2023 to January 2024. A total of 4,068 pregnant women seeking ANC for the first time in their pregnancy were surveyed. We built country-specific ANC completeness indices that measured provision of 16 to 22 recommended clinical actions in 5 domains: physical examinations, diagnostic tests, history taking and screening, counselling, and treatment and prevention. We investigated whether women with pregnancy risks tended to receive higher quality care and we assessed the quality of detection and management of 7 concurrent illnesses and pregnancy risk factors (anemia, undernutrition, obesity, chronic illnesses, depression, prior obstetric complications, and danger signs). ANC completeness ranged from 43% in Ethiopia, 66% in Kenya, 73% in India, and 76% in South Africa, with large gaps in history taking, screening, and counselling. Most women in Ethiopia, Kenya, and South Africa initiated ANC in second or third trimesters. We used country-specific multivariable mixed-effects linear regression models to investigate factors associated with ANC completeness. Models included individual demographics, health status, presence of risk factors, health facility characteristics, and fixed effects for the study site. We found that some facility characteristics (staffing, patient volume, structural readiness) were associated with variation in ANC completeness. In contrast, pregnancy risk factors were only associated with a 1.7 percentage points increase in ANC completeness (95% confidence interval 0.3, 3.0, p-value 0.014) in Kenya only. Poor self-reported health was associated with higher ANC completeness in India and South Africa and with lower ANC completeness in Ethiopia. Some concurrent illnesses and risk factors were overlooked during the ANC visit. Between 0% and 6% of undernourished women were prescribed food supplementation and only 1% to 3% of women with depression were referred to a mental health provider or prescribed antidepressants. Only 36% to 73% of women who had previously experienced an obstetric complication (a miscarriage, preterm birth, stillbirth, or newborn death) discussed their obstetric history with the provider during the first ANC visit. Although we aimed to validate self-reported information on health status and content of care with data from health cards, our findings may be affected by recall or other information biases., Conclusions: In this study, we observed gaps in adherence to ANC standards, particularly for women in need of specialized management. Strategies to maximize the potential health benefits of ANC should target women at risk of poor pregnancy outcomes and improve early initiation of ANC in the first trimester., Competing Interests: MEK is a member of the PLOS Medicine Editorial Board., (Copyright: © 2024 Arsenault et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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12. Implementation of Maternal and Newborn Health Mobile Phone E-Cohorts to Track Longitudinal Care Quality in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
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Wright K, Mugenya I, Clarke-Deelder E, Baensch L, Taddele T, Mebratie AD, Chaudhry M, Jarhyan P, Mfeka-Nkabinde NG, Nzinga J, Mohan S, Getachew T, Kruk ME, and Arsenault C
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- Humans, Female, India, Kenya, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Longitudinal Studies, South Africa, Ethiopia, Quality of Health Care, Prenatal Care, Infant Health, Maternal Health Services, Adult, Cell Phone, Developing Countries
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Background: The maternal and newborn health (MNH) eCohort is a new mixed-mode (in-person and phone) longitudinal survey aiming to provide data on novel and undermeasured dimensions of quality along the MNH continuum of care. We describe implementation experiences and lessons learned in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa to inform future longitudinal mobile phone-based studies on health system quality., Methods: To document the implementation approach and lesson learned, we engaged numerous stakeholders and conducted data reviews, debriefs, and a workshop with participants from all collaborative research organizations., Results: The MNH eCohorts enrolled women during their first antenatal care visit in 2 sentinel sites in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa. In India, a site with better health outcomes and a site with poorer outcomes were chosen. In the remaining countries, an urban site and a rural site were chosen. Enrollment facilities reflect care-seeking patterns according to local health information data across public and private facilities and primary and secondary levels. Data collectors had a range of educational and experience profiles, and phone data collection was completed by the same enumerators in some countries and outsourced to data collection firms in others. Adequate infrastructure (including Internet and mobile phone coverage) was essential to implementation. Although follow-up is ongoing in India and South Africa, the eCohort retained 89%-90% of participants throughout the entire pregnancy and 78%-81% until 3 months postpartum in Ethiopia and Kenya, respectively., Conclusions: The MNH eCohort is a complex and long survey. Careful and thoughtful implementation demonstrates that it is a useful tool to gather data on health system quality and continuity and on changes in user experience over the continuum of care. Findings from the eCohort related to care and system competence and user experience will be valuable to program managers and policymakers alike., (© Wright et al.)
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- 2024
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13. Association between achieving adequate antenatal care and health-seeking behaviors: A study of Demographic and Health Surveys in 47 low- and middle-income countries.
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Jiao B, Iversen I, Sato R, Pecenka C, Khan S, Baral R, Kruk ME, Arsenault C, and Verguet S
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Health Surveys, Young Adult, Adolescent, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Prenatal Care, Developing Countries, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data
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Background: Antenatal care (ANC) is essential for ensuring the well-being of pregnant women and their fetuses. This study models the association between achieving adequate ANC and various health and health-seeking indicators across wealth quintiles in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)., Methods and Findings: We analyzed data from 638,265 women across 47 LMICs using available Demographic and Health Surveys from 2010 to 2022. Via multilevel logistic regression analyses adjusted for a series of confounding variables and country and wealth quintile fixed effects, we estimated the projected impact of achieving adequate ANC utilization and quality on a series of health and health care indicators: facility birth, postnatal care, childhood immunizations, and childhood stunting and wasting. Achieving adequate levels of ANC utilization and quality (defined as at least 4 visits, blood pressure monitoring, and blood and urine testing) was positively associated with health-seeking behavior across the majority of countries. The strongest association was observed for facility birth, followed by postnatal care and child immunization. The strength of the associations varied across countries and wealth quintiles, with more significant ones observed in countries with lower baseline ANC utilization levels and among the lower wealth quintiles. The associations of ANC with childhood stunting and wasting were notably less statistically significant compared to other indicators. Despite rigorous adjustments for potential confounders, a limitation to the methodology is that it is possible that unobserved variables may still impact outcomes., Conclusions: Strengthening ANC is associated with improved use of other health care in LMICs. ANC could serve as a critical platform for improving health outcomes for mothers and their children, emphasizing its importance beyond direct impact on maternal and neonatal mortality., Competing Interests: We have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: MEK is a member of the Editorial Board of PLOS Medicine., (Copyright: © 2024 Jiao et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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14. Routine data in a primary care performance dashboard, Ethiopia.
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Arsenault C, Mebratie AD, Gelaw SK, and Shamebo D
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- Ethiopia, Humans, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections epidemiology, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Quality Indicators, Health Care
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Objective: To explore the feasibility of building a primary care performance dashboard using DHIS2 data from Ethiopia's largest urban (Addis Ababa), agrarian (Oromia) and pastoral (Somali) regions., Methods: We extracted 26 data elements reported by 12 062 health facilities to DHIS2 for the period 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2023. Focusing on indicators of effectiveness, safety and user experience, we built 14 indicators of primary care performance covering reproductive, maternal and child health, human immunodeficiency virus, tuberculosis, noncommunicable disease care and antibiotic prescription. We assessed data completeness by calculating the proportion of facilities reporting each month, and examined the presence of extreme outliers and assessed external validity., Findings: At the regional level, average completeness across all data elements was highest in Addis Ababa (82.9%), followed by Oromia (66.2%) and Somali (52.6%). Private clinics across regions had low completeness, ranging from 38.6% in Somali to 58.7% in Addis Ababa. We found only a few outliers (334 of 816 578 observations) and noted that external validity was high for 11 of 14 indicators of primary care performance. However, the 12-month antiretroviral treatment retention rate and proportions of patients with controlled diabetes or hypertension exhibited poor external validity., Conclusion: The Ethiopian DHIS2 contains information for measuring primary care performance, using simple analytical methods, at national and regional levels and by facility type. Despite remaining data quality issues, the health management information system is an important data source for generating health system performance assessment measures on a national scale., ((c) 2024 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.)
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- 2024
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15. Population assessment of health system performance in 16 countries.
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Kruk ME, Sabwa S, Lewis TP, Aniebo I, Arsenault C, Carai S, Garcia PJ, Garcia-Elorrio E, Fink G, Kassa M, Mohan S, Moshabela M, Oh J, Pate MA, and Nzinga J
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- Humans, Developing Countries, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Developed Countries, Quality of Health Care, Healthcare Disparities, Global Health, Health Services Accessibility
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Objective: To demonstrate how the new internationally comparable instrument, the People's Voice Survey, can be used to contribute the perspective of the population in assessing health system performance in countries of all levels of income., Methods: We surveyed representative samples of populations in 16 low-, middle- and high-income countries on health-care utilization, experience and confidence during 2022-2023. We summarized and visualized data corresponding to the key domains of the World Health Organization universal health coverage framework for health system performance assessment. We examined correlation with per capita health spending by calculating Pearson coefficients, and within-country income-based inequities using the slope index of inequality., Findings: In the domain of care effectiveness, we found major gaps in health screenings and endorsement of public primary care. Only one in three respondents reported very good user experience during health visits, with lower proportions in low-income countries. Access to health care was rated highest of all domains; however, only half of the populations felt secure that they could access and afford high-quality care if they became ill. Populations rated the quality of private health systems higher than that of public health systems in most countries. Only half of respondents felt involved in decision-making (less in high-income countries). Within countries, we found statistically significant pro-rich inequalities across many indicators., Conclusion: Populations can provide vital information about the real-world function of health systems, complementing other system performance metrics. Population-wide surveys such as the People's Voice Survey should become part of regular health system performance assessments., ((c) 2024 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.)
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- 2024
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16. Users' perception of quality as a driver of private healthcare use in Mexico: Insights from the People's Voice Survey.
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Doubova SV, Leslie HH, Pérez-Cuevas R, Kruk ME, and Arsenault C
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- Humans, Male, Female, Mexico, Adult, Middle Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Public Sector, Adolescent, Young Adult, Perception, Health Expenditures, Delivery of Health Care, Private Sector, Quality of Health Care
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Objective: The Mexican government has pursued multiple initiatives to improve healthcare coverage and financial protection. Yet, out-of-pocket health spending and use of private sector providers in Mexico remains high. In this paper, we sought to describe the characteristics of public and private healthcare users, describe recent visit quality across provider types, and to assess whether perceiving the public healthcare sector as poor quality is associated with private health sector use., Methods and Findings: We analyzed the cross-sectional People's Voice Survey conducted from December 2022 to January 2023. We used Chi-square tests to compare contextual, individual, and need-for-care factors and ratings of most recent visits between users of public (social security and other public providers) and private sector providers (stand-alone private providers and providers adjacent to pharmacies). We used a multivariable Poisson regression model to assess associations between low ratings of public healthcare sources and the use of private care. Among the 811 respondents with a healthcare visit in the past year, 31.2% used private sources. Private healthcare users were more educated and had higher incomes than public healthcare users. Quality of most recent visit was rated more highly in private providers (70.2% rating the visit as excellent or very good for stand-alone private providers and 54.3% for pharmacy-adjacent doctors) compared to social security (41.6%) and other public providers (46.6%). Those who perceived public health institutions as low quality had a higher probability of seeking private healthcare., Conclusion: Users rated public care visits poorly relative to private care; at the population level, perceptions of poor quality care may drive private care use and hence out-of-pocket costs. Improving public healthcare quality is necessary to ensure universal health coverage., Competing Interests: HHL is an academic Editor for PLOS Global Public Health. Other authors have declared no competing interests., (Copyright: © 2024 Doubova et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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17. Data challenges for international health emergencies: lessons learned from ten international COVID-19 driver projects.
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Boylan S, Arsenault C, Barreto M, Bozza FA, Fonseca A, Forde E, Hookham L, Humphreys GS, Ichihara MY, Le Doare K, Liu XF, McNamara E, Mugunga JC, Oliveira JF, Ouma J, Postlethwaite N, Retford M, Reyes LF, Morris AD, and Wozencraft A
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- Humans, International Cooperation, Emergencies, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 epidemiology, Information Dissemination methods, Global Health
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of international data sharing and access to improve health outcomes for all. The International COVID-19 Data Alliance (ICODA) programme enabled 12 exemplar or driver projects to use existing health-related data to address major research questions relating to the pandemic, and developed data science approaches that helped each research team to overcome challenges, accelerate the data research cycle, and produce rapid insights and outputs. These approaches also sought to address inequity in data access and use, test approaches to ethical health data use, and make summary datasets and outputs accessible to a wider group of researchers. This Health Policy paper focuses on the challenges and lessons learned from ten of the ICODA driver projects, involving researchers from 19 countries and a range of health-related datasets. The ICODA programme reviewed the time taken for each project to complete stages of the health data research cycle and identified common challenges in areas such as data sharing agreements and data curation. Solutions included provision of standard data sharing templates, additional data curation expertise at an early stage, and a trusted research environment that facilitated data sharing across national boundaries and reduced risk. These approaches enabled the driver projects to rapidly produce research outputs, including publications, shared code, dashboards, and innovative resources, which can all be accessed and used by other research teams to address global health challenges., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests All coauthors (except EF) received funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Minderoo Foundation for the ICODA initiative. KLD received grant funding for the main project from the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP) 2 programme supported by the European Union (RIA2020EF-2926 periCOVID Africa). LFR received grants from Pfizer and Merck Sharp & Dohme; consulting fees from Merck Sharp & Dohme, Pfizer, and GSK; payment for lectures and presentations from Merck Sharp & Dohme and GSK; and payment for expert testimony from Merck Sharp & Dohme, Pfizer, and GSK. MYI received grant funding from the Ministry of Health (decentralised executive term, process number 25000200517/2019-46), National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), and the Wellcome Trust; and payment to participate in the International Population Data Linkage Network Conference from the NIHR Global Health Research Program Award. MB received grants from the London School of Economics, The Rockefeller Foundation, Global Challenges Research Fund Global Multimorbidity, and Google; has received consultancy fees from the Singapore Institute of Management; and has a patent from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Standards Association. AF has received grants from the Ministry of Health, NIHR, and the Wellcome Trust. GSH received funding from the Gates Foundation contract for contract work unrelated to the contents of the manuscript; consultancy fees from Vivli clinical data sharing platform and ClinicalStudyDataRequest.com clinical data sharing platform; and fees from the National Institute on Ageing to present at their data sharing workshop. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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18. User-reported quality of care: findings from the first round of the People's Voice Survey in 14 countries.
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Lewis TP, Kassa M, Kapoor NR, Arsenault C, Bazua-Lobato R, Dayalu R, Fink G, Getachew T, Jarhyan P, Lee HY, Mazzoni A, Medina-Ranilla J, Naidoo I, Tadele A, and Kruk ME
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- Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Expenditures, Income, Quality of Health Care, Health Facilities
- Abstract
High-quality care is essential for improving health outcomes, although many health systems struggle to maintain good quality. We use data from the People's Voice Survey-a nationally representative survey conducted in 14 high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries-to describe user-reported quality of most recent health care in the past 12 months. We described ratings for 14 measures of care competence, system competence, and user experience and assessed the relationship between visit quality factors and user recommendation of the facility. We disaggregated the data by high-need and underserved groups. The proportion of respondents rating their most recent visit as high quality ranged from 25% in Laos to 74% in the USA. The mean facility recommendation score was 7·7 out of 10. Individuals with high needs or who are underserved reported lower-quality services on average across countries. Countries with high health expenditure per capita tended to have better care ratings than countries with low health expenditure. Visit quality factors explained a high proportion of variation in facility recommendations relative to facility or demographic factors. These results show that user-reported quality is low but increases with high national health expenditure. Elevating care quality will require monitoring and improvements on multiple dimensions of care quality, especially in public systems., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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19. Health system quality and COVID-19 vaccination: a cross-sectional analysis in 14 countries.
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Arsenault C, Lewis TP, Kapoor NR, Okiro EA, Leslie HH, Armeni P, Jarhyan P, Doubova SV, Wright KD, Aryal A, Kounnavong S, Mohan S, Odipo E, Lee HY, Shin J, Ayele W, Medina-Ranilla J, Espinoza-Pajuelo L, Derseh Mebratie A, García Elorrio E, Mazzoni A, Oh J, SteelFisher GK, Tarricone R, and Kruk ME
- Abstract
The social and behavioural determinants of COVID-19 vaccination have been described previously. However, little is known about how vaccinated people use and rate their health system. We used surveys conducted in 14 countries to study the health system correlates of COVID-19 vaccination. Country-specific logistic regression models were adjusted for respondent age, education, income, chronic illness, history of COVID-19, urban residence, and minority ethnic, racial, or linguistic group. Estimates were summarised across countries using random effects meta-analysis. Vaccination coverage with at least two or three doses ranged from 29% in India to 85% in Peru. Greater health-care use, having a regular and high-quality provider, and receiving other preventive health services were positively associated with vaccination. Confidence in the health system and government also increased the odds of vaccination. By contrast, having unmet health-care needs or experiencing discrimination or a medical mistake decreased the odds of vaccination. Associations between health system predictors and vaccination tended to be stronger in high-income countries and in countries with the most COVID-19-related deaths. Access to quality health systems might affect vaccine decisions. Building strong primary care systems and ensuring a baseline level of quality that is affordable for all should be central to pandemic preparedness strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests Research for this Series paper was supported by grants to MEK and the QuEST Network from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. This research was also supported by grants to CA and MEK from Merck Sharp & Dohme; to EGE and HHL from the Inter-American Development Bank; and to JO from the Taejae Foundation. The funders of the study had no role in study design or conduct, data collection, data management, data analysis, data interpretation, the writing of the Series paper, or the decision to submit the Series paper for publication., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Inequalities in health system coverage and quality: a cross-sectional survey of four Latin American countries.
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Roberti J, Leslie HH, Doubova SV, Ranilla JM, Mazzoni A, Espinoza L, Calderón R, Arsenault C, García-Elorrio E, and García PJ
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- Humans, Aged, Latin America, Cross-Sectional Studies, Mexico, Pandemics, Income
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The premise of health as a human right in Latin America has been challenged by health system fragmentation, quality gaps, a growing burden of chronic disease, sociopolitical upheaval, and the COVID-19 pandemic. We characterised inequities in health system quality in Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and Uruguay. We did a cross-sectional telephone survey with up to 1250 adults in each country. We created binary outcomes in coverage, user experience, system competence, and confidence in the system and calculated the slope index of inequality by income and education. Although access to care was high, only a third of respondents reported having a high-quality source of care and 25% of those with mental health needs had those needs met. Two-thirds of adults were able to access relevant preventive care and 42% of older adults were screened for cardiovascular disease. Telehealth access, communication and autonomy in most recent visit, reasonable waiting times, and receiving preventive health checks showed inequalities favouring people with a high income. In Uruguay, inequality between government and social security services explained a substantial proportion of disparities in preventive health access. In other study countries, inequalities were also substantial within government and social security subsectors. Essential health system functions are unequal in these four Latin American countries., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests JMR declares having the role of assistant researcher at Cayetano Heredia University (San Martín de Porres, Peru). We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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21. Population confidence in the health system in 15 countries: results from the first round of the People's Voice Survey.
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Kruk ME, Kapoor NR, Lewis TP, Arsenault C, Boutsikari EC, Breda J, Carai S, Croke K, Dayalu R, Fink G, Garcia PJ, Kassa M, Mohan S, Moshabela M, Nzinga J, Oh J, Okiro EA, Prabhakaran D, SteelFisher GK, Tarricone R, and Garcia-Elorrio E
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- Humans, Female, Surveys and Questionnaires, Peru, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Population confidence is essential to a well functioning health system. Using data from the People's Voice Survey-a novel population survey conducted in 15 low-income, middle-income, and high-income countries-we report health system confidence among the general population and analyse its associated factors. Across the 15 countries, fewer than half of respondents were health secure and reported being somewhat or very confident that they could get and afford good-quality care if very sick. Only a quarter of respondents endorsed their current health system, deeming it to work well with no need for major reform. The lowest support was in Peru, the UK, and Greece-countries experiencing substantial health system challenges. Wealthy, more educated, young, and female respondents were less likely to endorse the health system in many countries, portending future challenges for maintaining social solidarity for publicly financed health systems. In pooled analyses, the perceived quality of the public health system and government responsiveness to public input were strongly associated with all confidence measures. These results provide a post-COVID-19 pandemic baseline of public confidence in the health system. The survey should be repeated regularly to inform policy and improve health system accountability., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests CA received funding from Merck that was used to conduct the People's Voice Survey in the USA, Mexico, Italy, and the UK. ECB received support for the manuscript from WHO Athens Quality of Care and Patient Safety Office Consultancy Contract. JB and SC received WHO support. EAO received support from the Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowships (number 224272) and the Wellcome Trust Kenya Major Overseas Programme (number 203077), consulting fees for serving on the AstraZeneca Vaccine and Immune Therapies Effectiveness Evidence Scientific Advisory Committee, and support for meetings and travel for TDR Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee meeting attendance supported by WHO. GSF received support for the manuscript provided by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation; grants or contracts through the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, and the National Institute of Aging and National Institutes of Health; and support for attending meetings and for travel through Dartmouth College., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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22. A Burkholderia stabilis outbreak associated with the use of ultrasound gel in multiple healthcare centres in Montréal, Canada, May-October 2021.
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Arsenault C, Harel J, Doualla-Bell F, Cavayas YA, Marchand-Sénécal X, Frenette C, Longtin Y, Lalande L, Diby LM, and Desmarais N
- Abstract
Background: Burkholderia stabilis is a non-fermenting, gram-negative bacteria that has previously been implicated in multiple nosocomial outbreaks through the use of contaminated medical devices and substances. This article reports on an outbreak of B. stabilis infections and colonizations, involving 11 patients from five acute care hospitals in Montréal, Canada., Methods: One sample was not available for testing, but the remaining 10 isolates (91%) were sent for phylogenetic testing. Medical materials and the patients' environments were also sampled and cultured. Samples were tested using pulsed field gel electrophoresis and multilocus sequence typing., Results: The outbreak was found to be associated with the use of intrinsically contaminated non-sterile ultrasound gel. Relatedness of the gel's and the patients' B. stabilis strains was demonstrated using gel electrophoresis and multilocus sequence typing analyses. The investigation was concluded with a prompt recall of the product, and the outbreak was declared over by the end of October 2021., Conclusion: Contaminated non-sterile gel caused infections and pseudo-infections in several patients., Competing Interests: Competing interests YL has received research support from Syneos Health for work unrelated to the current study.
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- 2023
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23. Quality of routine health data at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ethiopia, Haiti, Laos, Nepal, and South Africa.
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Ayele W, Gage A, Kapoor NR, Kassahun Gelaw S, Hensman D, Derseh Mebratie A, Nega A, Asai D, Molla G, Mehata S, Mthethwa L, Mfeka-Nkabinde NG, Joseph JP, Pierre DM, Thermidor R, and Arsenault C
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- Pregnancy, Humans, Female, Pandemics, Laos epidemiology, Nepal epidemiology, Ethiopia, South Africa epidemiology, Haiti epidemiology, Cesarean Section, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, governments and researchers have used routine health data to estimate potential declines in the delivery and uptake of essential health services. This research relies on the data being high quality and, crucially, on the data quality not changing because of the pandemic. In this paper, we investigated those assumptions and assessed data quality before and during COVID-19., Methods: We obtained routine health data from the DHIS2 platforms in Ethiopia, Haiti, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Nepal, and South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal province) for a range of 40 indicators on essential health services and institutional deaths. We extracted data over 24 months (January 2019-December 2020) including pre-pandemic data and the first 9 months of the pandemic. We assessed four dimensions of data quality: reporting completeness, presence of outliers, internal consistency, and external consistency., Results: We found high reporting completeness across countries and services and few declines in reporting at the onset of the pandemic. Positive outliers represented fewer than 1% of facility-month observations across services. Assessment of internal consistency across vaccine indicators found similar reporting of vaccines in all countries. Comparing cesarean section rates in the HMIS to those from population-representative surveys, we found high external consistency in all countries analyzed., Conclusions: While efforts remain to improve the quality of these data, our results show that several indicators in the HMIS can be reliably used to monitor service provision over time in these five countries., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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24. Associations between the stringency of COVID-19 containment policies and health service disruptions in 10 countries.
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Reddy T, Kapoor NR, Kubota S, Doubova SV, Asai D, Mariam DH, Ayele W, Mebratie AD, Thermidor R, Sapag JC, Bedregal P, Passi-Solar Á, Gordon-Strachan G, Dulal M, Gadeka DD, Mehata S, Margozzini P, Leerapan B, Rittiphairoj T, Kaewkamjornchai P, Nega A, Awoonor-Williams JK, Kruk ME, and Arsenault C
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- Humans, Health Services, Health Facilities, Long-Term Care, Pandemics prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Disruptions in essential health services during the COVID-19 pandemic have been reported in several countries. Yet, patterns in health service disruption according to country responses remain unclear. In this paper, we investigate associations between the stringency of COVID-19 containment policies and disruptions in 31 health services in 10 low- middle- and high-income countries in 2020., Methods: Using routine health information systems and administrative data from 10 countries (Chile, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Mexico, Nepal, South Africa, South Korea, and Thailand) we estimated health service disruptions for the period of April to December 2020 by dividing monthly service provision at national levels by the average service provision in the 15 months pre-COVID (January 2019-March 2020). We used the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) index and multi-level linear regression analyses to assess associations between the stringency of restrictions and health service disruptions over nine months. We extended the analysis by examining associations between 11 individual containment or closure policies and health service disruptions. Models were adjusted for COVID caseload, health service category and country GDP and included robust standard errors., Findings: Chronic disease care was among the most affected services. Regression analyses revealed that a 10% increase in the mean stringency index was associated with a 3.3 percentage-point (95% CI -3.9, -2.7) reduction in relative service volumes. Among individual policies, curfews, and the presence of a state of emergency, had the largest coefficients and were associated with 14.1 (95% CI -19.6, 8.7) and 10.7 (95% CI -12.7, -8.7) percentage-point lower relative service volumes, respectively. In contrast, number of COVID-19 cases in 2020 was not associated with health service disruptions in any model., Conclusions: Although containment policies were crucial in reducing COVID-19 mortality in many contexts, it is important to consider the indirect effects of these restrictions. Strategies to improve the resilience of health systems should be designed to ensure that populations can continue accessing essential health care despite the presence of containment policies during future infectious disease outbreaks., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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25. Tracking health system performance in times of crisis using routine health data: lessons learned from a multicountry consortium.
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Turcotte-Tremblay AM, Leerapan B, Akweongo P, Amponsah F, Aryal A, Asai D, Awoonor-Williams JK, Ayele W, Bauhoff S, Doubova SV, Gadeka DD, Dulal M, Gage A, Gordon-Strachan G, Haile-Mariam D, Joseph JP, Kaewkamjornchai P, Kapoor NR, Gelaw SK, Kim MK, Kruk ME, Kubota S, Margozzini P, Mehata S, Mthethwa L, Nega A, Oh J, Park SK, Passi-Solar A, Perez Cuevas RE, Reddy T, Rittiphairoj T, Sapag JC, Thermidor R, Tlou B, and Arsenault C
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- Child, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Data Accuracy, Electronic Health Records, Ethiopia, Population Groups, COVID-19
- Abstract
COVID-19 has prompted the use of readily available administrative data to track health system performance in times of crisis and to monitor disruptions in essential healthcare services. In this commentary we describe our experience working with these data and lessons learned across countries. Since April 2020, the Quality Evidence for Health System Transformation (QuEST) network has used administrative data and routine health information systems (RHIS) to assess health system performance during COVID-19 in Chile, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Mexico, Nepal, South Africa, Republic of Korea and Thailand. We compiled a large set of indicators related to common health conditions for the purpose of multicountry comparisons. The study compiled 73 indicators. A total of 43% of the indicators compiled pertained to reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH). Only 12% of the indicators were related to hypertension, diabetes or cancer care. We also found few indicators related to mental health services and outcomes within these data systems. Moreover, 72% of the indicators compiled were related to volume of services delivered, 18% to health outcomes and only 10% to the quality of processes of care. While several datasets were complete or near-complete censuses of all health facilities in the country, others excluded some facility types or population groups. In some countries, RHIS did not capture services delivered through non-visit or nonconventional care during COVID-19, such as telemedicine. We propose the following recommendations to improve the analysis of administrative and RHIS data to track health system performance in times of crisis: ensure the scope of health conditions covered is aligned with the burden of disease, increase the number of indicators related to quality of care and health outcomes; incorporate data on nonconventional care such as telehealth; continue improving data quality and expand reporting from private sector facilities; move towards collecting patient-level data through electronic health records to facilitate quality-of-care assessment and equity analyses; implement more resilient and standardized health information technologies; reduce delays and loosen restrictions for researchers to access the data; complement routine data with patient-reported data; and employ mixed methods to better understand the underlying causes of service disruptions., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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26. Effect of lifting COVID-19 restrictions on utilisation of primary care services in Nepal: a difference-in-differences analysis.
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Kapoor NR, Aryal A, Mehata S, Dulal M, Kruk ME, Bauhoff S, and Arsenault C
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- Child, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Communicable Disease Control, Contraceptive Agents, Nepal epidemiology, Pandemics prevention & control, Primary Health Care, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Introduction: An increasing number of studies have reported disruptions in health service utilisation due to the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated restrictions. However, little is known about the effect of lifting COVID-19 restrictions on health service utilisation. The objective of this study was to estimate the effect of lifting COVID-19 restrictions on primary care service utilisation in Nepal., Methods: Data on utilisation of 10 primary care services were extracted from the Health Management Information System across all health facilities in Nepal. We used a difference-in-differences design and linear fixed effects regressions to estimate the effect of lifting COVID-19 restrictions. The treatment group included palikas that had lifted restrictions in place from 17 August 2020 to 16 September 2020 (Bhadra 2077) and the control group included palikas that had maintained restrictions during that period. The pre-period included the 4 months of national lockdown from 24 March 2020 to 22 July 2020 (Chaitra 2076 to Ashar 2077). Models included month and palika fixed effects and controlled for COVID-19 incidence., Results: We found that lifting COVID-19 restrictions was associated with an average increase per palika of 57.5 contraceptive users (95% CI 14.6 to 100.5), 15.6 antenatal care visits (95% CI 5.3 to 25.9) and 1.6 child pneumonia visits (95% CI 0.2 to 2.9). This corresponded to a 9.4% increase in contraceptive users, 34.2% increase in antenatal care visits and 15.6% increase in child pneumonia visits. Utilisation of most other primary care services also increased after lifting restrictions, but coefficients were not statistically significant., Conclusions: Despite the ongoing pandemic, lifting restrictions can lead to an increase in some primary care services. Our results point to a causal link between restrictions and health service utilisation and call for policy makers in low- and middle-income countries to carefully consider the trade-offs of strict lockdowns during future COVID-19 waves or future pandemics., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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27. Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on health service utilization across regions of Ethiopia: An interrupted time series analysis of health information system data from 2019-2020.
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Mebratie AD, Nega A, Gage A, Mariam DH, Eshetu MK, and Arsenault C
- Abstract
The spread of COVID-19 and associated deaths have remained low in Ethiopia. However, the pandemic could pose a public health crisis indirectly through disruptions in essential health services. The aim of this study was to examine disruptions in health service utilization during the first nine months of the COVID-19 pandemic across 10 regions in Ethiopia. We analyzed utilization of 21 different health services across all of Ethiopia (except the Tigray region) for the period of January 2019 to December 2020. Data were extracted from the Ethiopian district health information system (DHIS2). Monthly visits in 2020 were graphed relative to the same months in 2019. Interrupted time series analysis was used to estimate the effect of the pandemic on service utilization in each region. We found that disruptions in health services were generally higher in urban regions which were most affected by COVID. Outpatient visits declined by 52%, 54%, and 58%, specifically in Dire Dawa, Addis Ababa and Harari, the three urban regions. Similarly, there was a 47% reduction in inpatient admissions in Addis Ababa. In agrarian regions, the pandemic caused an 11% to 17% reduction in outpatient visits and a 10% to 27% decline in inpatient admissions. Visits for children with diarrhea, pneumonia and malnutrition also declined substantially while maternal health services were less affected. Our study indicates that disruptions in health services were more pronounced in areas that were relatively harder hit by the pandemic. Our results show that the Ethiopian health system has a limited capacity to absorb shocks. During future waves of COVID or future pandemics, the Ethiopian health system must be better prepared to maintain essential services and mitigate the indirect impact of the pandemic on public health, particularly in urban areas., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2022 Mebratie et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2022
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28. Measuring effective coverage of maternal and child health services in Cambodia: a retrospective analysis of Demographic and Health Surveys from 2005 to 2014.
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Kim MK, Kim SA, Oh J, Kim CE, and Arsenault C
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- Female, Pregnancy, Humans, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Cambodia, Prenatal Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Socioeconomic Factors, Family Characteristics, Health Surveys, Maternal Health Services, Maternal-Child Health Services
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate effective, quality-adjusted, coverage and inequality of maternal and child health (MCH) services to assess progress in improving quality of care in Cambodia., Design: A retrospective secondary analysis using the three most recent (2005, 2010 and 2014) Demographic and Health Surveys., Setting: Cambodia., Participants: 53 155 women aged 15-49 years old and 23 242 children under 5 years old across the three surveys., Outcome Measures: We estimated crude coverage, effective coverage and inequality in effective coverage for five MCH services over time: antenatal care (ANC), facility delivery and sick childcare for diarrhoea, pneumonia and fever. Quality was defined by the proportion of care seekers who received a set of interventions during healthcare visits. Effective coverage was estimated by combining crude coverage and quality. We used equiplots and risk ratios, to assess patterns in inequality in MCH effective coverage across wealth quintile, urban-rural and women's education levels and over time., Results: In 2014, crude and effective coverage was 80.1% and 56.4%, respectively, for maternal health services (ANC and facility delivery) and 59.1% and 26.9%, respectively, for sick childcare (diarrhoea, pneumonia and fever). Between 2005 and 2014, effective coverage improved for all services, but improvements were larger for maternal healthcare than for sick child care. In 2014, poorer children were more likely to receive oral rehydration solution for diarrhoea than children from richer households. Meanwhile, women from urban areas were more likely to receive a postnatal check before getting discharged., Conclusions: Effective coverage has generally improved in Cambodia but efforts remain to improve quality for all MCH services. Our results point to substantial gaps in curative sick child care, a large share of which is provided by unregulated private providers in Cambodia. Policymakers should focus on improving effective coverage, and not only crude coverage, to achieve the health-related Sustainable Development Goals by 2030., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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29. The effect of impulsivity and drinking motives on alcohol outcomes in college students: a 3-year longitudinal analysis.
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Fisher S, Hsu WW, Adams Z, Arsenault C, and Milich R
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Universities, Alcohol Drinking in College psychology, Impulsive Behavior, Motivation, Students
- Abstract
Objective: Substance use is a public health concern and cross-sectional studies have found that impulsivity and drinking motives influence substance use in emerging adults. Despite these findings, longitudinal studies with nuanced measures of impulsivity and drinking motives are needed. Participants: The current study investigated the three-year relationship between impulsivity-related traits, drinking motives, sex, and drinking outcomes in a sample of 509 college students (47.47% male; 81% White). Methods: The effects of impulsivity traits and drinking motives on problematic drinking outcomes were evaluated using linear mixed effects models. Results: The results confirmed the hypothesized relationship between traits of impulsivity, drinking motives, and alcohol outcomes over time. Further, sex significantly interacted with drinking motives longitudinally in its relationship with alcohol use outcomes. Conclusions: These results indicate that intervention efforts may need to be tailored to specific individual attributes to target direct correlates of alcohol use behavior to increase effectiveness.
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- 2022
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30. The road to recovery: an interrupted time series analysis of policy intervention to restore essential health services in Mexico during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Doubova SV, Arsenault C, Contreras-Sánchez SE, Borrayo-Sánchez G, and Leslie HH
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- Child, Early Detection of Cancer, Female, Humans, Interrupted Time Series Analysis, Mexico epidemiology, Pandemics prevention & control, Policy, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, COVID-19 epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Hypertension, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Recovery of health services disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic represents a significant challenge in low- and middle-income countries. In April 2021, the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS), which provides health care to 68.5 million people, launched the National Strategy for Health Services Recovery (Recovery policy). The study objective was to evaluate whether the Recovery policy addressed COVID-related declines in maternal, child health, and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) services., Methods: We analysed the data of 35 IMSS delegations from January 2019 to November 2021 on contraceptive visits, antenatal care consultations, deliveries, caesarean sections, sick children's consultations, child vaccination, breast and cervical cancer screening, diabetes and hypertension consultations, and control. We focused on the period before (April 2020 - March 2021) and during (April 2021 - November 2021) the Recovery policy and used an interrupted time series design and Poisson Generalized Estimating Equation models to estimate the association of this policy with service use and outcomes and change in their trends., Results: Despite the third wave of the pandemic in 2021, service utilization increased in the Recovery period, reaching (at minimum) 49% of pre-pandemic levels for sick children's consultations and (at maximum) 106% of pre-pandemic levels for breast cancer screenings. Evidence for the Recovery policy role was mixed: the policy was associated with increased facility deliveries (IRR = 1.15, 95%CI = 1.11-1.19) with a growing trend over time (IRR = 1.04, 95%CI = 1.03-1.05); antenatal care and child health services saw strong level effects but decrease over time. Additionally, the Recovery policy was associated with diabetes and hypertension control. Services recovery varied across delegations., Conclusions: Health service utilization and NCDs control demonstrated important gains in 2021, but evidence suggests the policy had inconsistent effects across services and decreasing impact over time. Further efforts to strengthen essential health services and ensure consistent recovery across delegations are warranted., Competing Interests: Disclosure of interest: The authos completed the ICMJE Disclosure of Interest Form and declare the following activities and relationships: Dr Hannah H. Leslie declares research funding from the World Bank, the Interamerican Development Bank, ICF International and the National Institutes of Health during this research. Dr Arsenault, Dr Doubova, and Dr Contreras-Sanchez declare research funding from the Grand Challenges ICODA pilot initiative, delivered by Health Data Research UK and funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Minderoo Foundation. Dr Arsenault also acknowledges funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (grants INV-005254, INV-017293 and OPP113592)., (Copyright © 2022 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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31. COVID-19 and resilience of healthcare systems in ten countries.
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Arsenault C, Gage A, Kim MK, Kapoor NR, Akweongo P, Amponsah F, Aryal A, Asai D, Awoonor-Williams JK, Ayele W, Bedregal P, Doubova SV, Dulal M, Gadeka DD, Gordon-Strachan G, Mariam DH, Hensman D, Joseph JP, Kaewkamjornchai P, Eshetu MK, Gelaw SK, Kubota S, Leerapan B, Margozzini P, Mebratie AD, Mehata S, Moshabela M, Mthethwa L, Nega A, Oh J, Park S, Passi-Solar Á, Pérez-Cuevas R, Phengsavanh A, Reddy T, Rittiphairoj T, Sapag JC, Thermidor R, Tlou B, Valenzuela Guiñez F, Bauhoff S, and Kruk ME
- Subjects
- Child, Communicable Disease Control, Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Income, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Declines in health service use during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic could have important effects on population health. In this study, we used an interrupted time series design to assess the immediate effect of the pandemic on 31 health services in two low-income (Ethiopia and Haiti), six middle-income (Ghana, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Mexico, Nepal, South Africa and Thailand) and high-income (Chile and South Korea) countries. Despite efforts to maintain health services, disruptions of varying magnitude and duration were found in every country, with no clear patterns by country income group or pandemic intensity. Disruptions in health services often preceded COVID-19 waves. Cancer screenings, TB screening and detection and HIV testing were most affected (26-96% declines). Total outpatient visits declined by 9-40% at national levels and remained lower than predicted by the end of 2020. Maternal health services were disrupted in approximately half of the countries, with declines ranging from 5% to 33%. Child vaccinations were disrupted for shorter periods, but we estimate that catch-up campaigns might not have reached all children missed. By contrast, provision of antiretrovirals for HIV was not affected. By the end of 2020, substantial disruptions remained in half of the countries. Preliminary data for 2021 indicate that disruptions likely persisted. Although a portion of the declines observed might result from decreased needs during lockdowns (from fewer infectious illnesses or injuries), a larger share likely reflects a shortfall of health system resilience. Countries must plan to compensate for missed healthcare during the current pandemic and invest in strategies for better health system resilience for future emergencies., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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32. Improving health and social systems for all children in LMICs: structural innovations to deliver high-quality services.
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Kruk ME, Lewis TP, Arsenault C, Bhutta ZA, Irimu G, Jeong J, Lassi ZS, Sawyer SM, Vaivada T, Waiswa P, and Yousafzai AK
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Mental Health, Poverty, Social Work, Developing Countries, Health Promotion
- Abstract
Despite health gains over the past 30 years, children and adolescents are not reaching their health potential in many low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). In addition to health systems, social systems, such as schools, communities, families, and digital platforms, can be used to promote health. We did a targeted literature review of how well health and social systems are meeting the needs of children in LMICs using the framework of The Lancet Global Health Commission on high-quality health systems and we reviewed evidence for structural reforms in health and social sectors. We found that quality of services for children is substandard across both health and social systems. Health systems have deficits in care competence (eg, diagnosis and management), system competence (eg, timeliness, continuity, and referral), user experience (eg, respect and usability), service provision for common and serious conditions (eg, cancer, trauma, and mental health), and service offerings for adolescents. Education and social services for child health are limited by low funding and poor coordination with other sectors. Structural reforms are more likely to improve service quality substantially and at scale than are micro-level efforts. Promising approaches include governing for quality (eg, leadership, expert management, and learning systems), redesigning service delivery to maximise outcomes, and empowering families to better care for children and to demand quality care from health and social systems. Additional research is needed on health needs across the life course, health system performance for children and families, and large-scale evaluation of promising health and social programmes., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests ZAB reports grants from International Development Research Centre, UNICEF, WHO, The Rockefeller Foundation, and the Institute of International Education, during the conduct of the study. TZ reports grants from International Development Research Centre, UNICEF, WHO, The Rockefeller Foundation, and the Institute of International Education, during the conduct of the study. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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33. Overcoming disruptions in essential health services during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico.
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Doubova SV, Robledo-Aburto ZA, Duque-Molina C, Borrayo-Sánchez G, González-León M, Avilés-Hernández R, Contreras-Sánchez SE, Leslie HH, Kruk M, Pérez-Cuevas R, and Arsenault C
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- Health Services, Humans, Mexico epidemiology, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2022
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34. How does the effectiveness of strategies to improve healthcare provider practices in low-income and middle-income countries change after implementation? Secondary analysis of a systematic review.
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Arsenault C, Rowe SY, Ross-Degnan D, Peters DH, Roder-DeWan S, Kruk ME, and Rowe AK
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- Health Personnel education, Humans, Income, Developing Countries, Poverty
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Background: A recent systematic review evaluated the effectiveness of strategies to improve healthcare provider (HCP) performance in low-income and middle-income countries. The review identified strategies with varying effects, including in-service training, supervision and group problem-solving. However, whether their effectiveness changed over time remained unclear. In particular, understanding whether effects decay over time is crucial to improve sustainability., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of data from the aforementioned review to explore associations between time and effectiveness. We calculated effect sizes (defined as percentage-point (%-point) changes) for HCP practice outcomes (eg, percentage of patients correctly treated) at each follow-up time point after the strategy was implemented. We estimated the association between time and effectiveness using random-intercept linear regression models with time-specific effect sizes clustered within studies and adjusted for baseline performance., Results: The primary analysis included 37 studies, and a sensitivity analysis included 77 additional studies. For training, every additional month of follow-up was associated with a 0.19 %-point decrease in effectiveness (95% CI: -0.36 to -0.03). For training combined with supervision, every additional month was associated with a 0.40 %-point decrease in effectiveness (95% CI: -0.68 to -0.12). Time trend results for supervision were inconclusive. For group problem-solving alone, time was positively associated with effectiveness, with a 0.50 %-point increase in effect per month (95% CI: 0.37 to 0.64). Group problem-solving combined with training was associated with large improvements, and its effect was not associated with time., Conclusions: Time trends in the effectiveness of different strategies to improve HCP practices vary among strategies. Programmes relying solely on in-service training might need periodical refresher training or, better still, consider combining training with group problem-solving. Although more high-quality research is needed, these results, which are important for decision-makers as they choose which strategies to use, underscore the utility of studies with multiple post-implementation measurements so sustainability of the impact on HCP practices can be assessed., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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35. Equitable Distribution of Poor Quality of Care? Equity in Quality of Reproductive Health Services in Ethiopia.
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Dinsa GD, Dessie E, Hurlburt S, Gebreyohannes Y, Arsenault C, Yakob B, Girma T, Berman P, and Kruk ME
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- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Ethiopia, Delivery of Health Care, Quality of Health Care, Prenatal Care, Reproductive Health Services
- Abstract
The Ethiopian health system faces persistent inequities in health-care utilization and outcomes, despite continued efforts to expand health service coverage. There is little evidence in the literature describing the status of equity in the quality of healthcare. This paper aims to understand the disparities in quality of antenatal care (ANC) and family planning (FP) among the poor and non-poor communities. We used the 2016 Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data to compute a Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), and the 2014 Service Provision Assessment (SPA) data to assess quality of ANC and FP services-defined as the level of adherence to World Health Organization (WHO) clinical and service guidelines. We merged the two datasets using geographical coordinates, and aggregated service users into facility catchment area clusters using a 2-km radius for urban and 10-km radius for rural facilities. We computed ANC and FP quality and MPI indices for each facility and assigned these to catchment areas. Using the international cutoff point for deprivation (MPI = 33.3%), we evaluated whether the quality of ANC and FP services varies by poor and non-poor catchment areas. We found that most of catchment areas (75.7%) were deprived. While the overall quality of ANC and FP services are low (33% and 34% respectively), we found little variation in the distribution of the quality of these services between poor and non-poor areas, urban and rural settings, or regionally. The short-term focus needs to be on improving the overall quality of services rather than on its distribution.
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- 2022
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36. Predictors of job satisfaction and intention to stay in the job among health-care providers in Uganda and Zambia.
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Kim MK, Arsenault C, Atuyambe LM, and Kruk ME
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Uganda, Zambia, Intention, Job Satisfaction
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Background: A shortage of competent health-care providers is a major contributor to poor quality health care in sub-Saharan Africa. To increase the retention of skilled health-care providers, we need to understand which factors make them feel satisfied with their work and want to stay in their job. This study investigates the relative contribution of provider, facility and contextual factors to job satisfaction and intention to stay on the job among health-care providers who performed obstetric care in Uganda and Zambia., Methods: This study was a secondary analysis of data from a maternal and newborn health program implementation evaluation in Uganda and Zambia. Using a Likert scale, providers rated their job satisfaction and intention to stay in their job. Predictors included gender, cadre, satisfaction with various facility resources and country. We used the Shapley and Owen decomposition of R2 method to estimate the variance explained by individual factors and groups of factors, adjusting for covariates at the facility and provider levels., Results: Of the 1134 providers included in the study, 68.3% were female, 32.4% were nurses and 77.1% worked in the public sector. Slightly more than half (52.3%) of providers were strongly satisfied with their job and 42.8% strongly agreed that they would continue to work at their facility for some time. A group of variables related to facility management explained most of the variance in both job satisfaction (37.6%) and intention to stay (43.1%). Among these, the most important individual variables were satisfaction with pay (20.57%) for job satisfaction and opinions being respected in the workplace (17.52%) for intention to stay. Doctors reported lower intention to stay than nurses. Provider demographics and facility level and ownership (public/private) were not associated with either outcome. There were also differences in job satisfaction and intention to stay between Ugandan and Zambian health-care providers., Conclusion: Our study suggests that managers play a crucial role in retaining a sufficient number of satisfied health-care providers providing obstetric care in two sub-Saharan African countries, Uganda and Zambia. Prioritizing and investing in health management systems and health managers are essential foundations for high-quality health systems., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of International Society for Quality in Health Care.)
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- 2021
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37. Disruption in essential health services in Mexico during COVID-19: an interrupted time series analysis of health information system data.
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Doubova SV, Leslie HH, Kruk ME, Pérez-Cuevas R, and Arsenault C
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- Cesarean Section, Child, Female, Health Services, Humans, Interrupted Time Series Analysis, Mexico epidemiology, Pandemics, Pregnancy, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Health Information Systems
- Abstract
Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted health systems around the world. The objectives of this study are to estimate the overall effect of the pandemic on essential health service use and outcomes in Mexico, describe observed and predicted trends in services over 24 months, and to estimate the number of visits lost through December 2020., Methods: We used health information system data for January 2019 to December 2020 from the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS), which provides health services for more than half of Mexico's population-65 million people. Our analysis includes nine indicators of service use and three outcome indicators for reproductive, maternal and child health and non-communicable disease services. We used an interrupted time series design and linear generalised estimating equation models to estimate the change in service use and outcomes from April to December 2020. Estimates were expressed using average marginal effects on the risk ratio scale., Results: The study found that across nine health services, an estimated 8.74 million patient visits were lost in Mexico. This included a decline of over two thirds for breast and cervical cancer screenings (79% and 68%, respectively), over half for sick child visits and female contraceptive services, approximately one-third for childhood vaccinations, diabetes, hypertension and antenatal care consultations, and a decline of 10% for deliveries performed at IMSS. In terms of patient outcomes, the proportion of patients with diabetes and hypertension with controlled conditions declined by 22% and 17%, respectively. Caesarean section rate did not change., Conclusion: Significant disruptions in health services show that the pandemic has strained the resilience of the Mexican health system and calls for urgent efforts to resume essential services and plan for catching up on missed preventive care even as the COVID-19 crisis continues in Mexico., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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38. Using health management information system data: case study and verification of institutional deliveries in Ethiopia.
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Arsenault C, Yakob B, Kassa M, Dinsa G, and Verguet S
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- Data Accuracy, Ethiopia, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Poverty, Pregnancy, Health Facilities, Management Information Systems
- Abstract
Health management information systems (HMIS) are a crucial source of timely health statistics and have the potential to improve reporting in low-income countries. However, concerns about data quality have hampered their widespread adoption in research and policy decisions. This article presents results from a data verification study undertaken to gain insights into the quality of HMIS data in Ethiopia. We also provide recommendations for working with HMIS data for research and policy translation. We linked the HMIS to the 2016 Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care Assessment, a national census of all health facilities that provided maternal and newborn health services in Ethiopia. We compared the number of visits for deliveries and caesarean sections (C-sections) reported in the HMIS in 2015 (January-December) to those found in source documents (paper-based labour and delivery and operating theatre registers) in 2425 facilities across Ethiopia. We found that two-thirds of facilities had 'good' HMIS reporting for deliveries (defined as reporting within 10% of source documents) and half had 'very good' reporting (within 5% of source documents). Results were similar for reporting on C-section deliveries. We found that good reporting was more common in urban areas (OR: 1.30, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.59), public facilities (OR: 2.95, 95% CI 1.38 to 6.29) and in hospitals compared with health centres (OR: 1.71, 95% CI 1.13 to 2.61). Facilities in the Somali and Afar regions had the lowest odds of good reporting compared with Addis Ababa and were more likely to over-report deliveries in the HMIS. Further work remains to address remaining discrepancies in the Ethiopian HMIS. Nonetheless, our findings corroborate previous data verification exercises in Ethiopia and support greater use and uptake of HMIS data for research and policy decisions (particularly, greater use of HMIS data elements (eg, absolute number of services provided each month) rather than coverage indicators). Increased use of these data, combined with feedback mechanisms, is necessary to maintain data quality., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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39. Patient volume and quality of primary care in Ethiopia: findings from the routine health information system and the 2014 Service Provision Assessment survey.
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Arsenault C, Yakob B, Tilahun T, Nigatu TG, Dinsa G, Woldie M, Kassa M, Berman P, and Kruk ME
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- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Ethiopia, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Primary Health Care, Quality of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Information Systems
- Abstract
Background: Several studies have reported inadequate levels of quality of care in the Ethiopian health system. Facility characteristics associated with better quality remain unclear. Understanding associations between patient volumes and quality of care could help organize service delivery and potentially improve patient outcomes., Methods: Using data from the routine health management information system (HMIS) and the 2014 Ethiopian Service Provision Assessment survey + we assessed associations between daily total outpatient volumes and quality of services. Quality of care at the facility level was estimated as the average of five measures of provider knowledge (clinical vignettes on malaria and tuberculosis) and competence (observations of family planning, antenatal care and sick child care consultations). We used linear regression models adjusted for several facility-level confounders and region fixed effects with log-transformed patient volume fitted as a linear spline. We repeated analyses for the association between volume of antenatal care visits and quality., Results: Our analysis included 424 facilities including 270 health centers, 45 primary hospitals and 109 general hospitals in Ethiopia. Quality was low across all facilities ranging from only 18 to 56% with a mean score of 38%. Outpatient volume varied from less than one patient per day to 581. We found a small but statistically significant association between volume and quality which appeared non-linear, with an inverted U-shape. Among facilities seeing less than 90.6 outpatients per day, quality increased with greater patient volumes. Among facilities seeing 90.6 or more outpatients per day, quality decreased with greater patient volumes. We found a similar association between volume and quality of antenatal care visits., Conclusions: Health care utilization and quality must be improved throughout the health system in Ethiopia. Our results are suggestive of a potential U-shape association between volume and quality of primary care services. Understanding the links between volume of patients and quality of care may provide insights for organizing service delivery in Ethiopia and similar contexts.
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- 2021
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40. Early experience with critically ill patients with COVID-19 in Montreal.
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Cavayas YA, Noël A, Brunette V, Williamson D, Frenette AJ, Arsenault C, Bellemare P, Lagrenade-Verdant C, LeGuillan S, Levesque E, Lamarche Y, Giasson M, Rico P, Beaulieu Y, Marsolais P, Serri K, Bernard F, and Albert M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, COVID-19 mortality, Canada, Critical Illness, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Respiration, Artificial, Retrospective Studies, COVID-19 physiopathology, COVID-19 therapy
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Purpose: Montreal has been the epicentre of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Canada. Given the regional disparities in incidence and mortality in the general population, we aimed to describe local characteristics, treatments, and outcomes of critically ill COVID-19 patients in Montreal., Methods: A single-centre retrospective cohort of consecutive adult patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal with confirmed COVID-19 were included., Results: Between 20 March and 13 May 2020, 75 patients were admitted, with a median [interquartile range (IQR)] age of 62 [53-72] yr and high rates of obesity (47%), hypertension (67%), and diabetes (37%). Healthcare-related infections were responsible for 35% of cases. The median [IQR] day 1 sequential organ failure assessment score was 6 [3-7]. Invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) was used in 57% of patients for a median [IQR] of 11 [5-22] days. Patients receiving IMV were characterized by a moderately decreased median [IQR] partial pressure of oxygen:fraction of inspired oxygen (day 1 PaO
2 :Fi O2 = 177 [138-276]; day 10 = 173 [147-227]) and compliance (day 1 = 48 [38-58] mL/cmH2 O; day 10 = 34 [28-42] mL/cmH2 O) and very elevated estimated dead space fraction (day 1 = 0.60 [0.53-0.67]; day 10 = 0.72 [0.69-0.79]). Overall hospital mortality was 25%, and 21% in the IMV patients. Mortality was 82% in patients ≥ 80 yr old., Conclusions: Characteristics and outcomes of critically ill patients with COVID-19 in Montreal were similar to those reported in the existing literature. We found an increased physiologic dead space, supporting the hypothesis that pulmonary vascular injury may be central to COVID-19-induced lung damage.- Published
- 2021
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41. Temporal trends in coverage, quality and equity of maternal and child health services in Rwanda, 2000-2015.
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Hategeka C, Arsenault C, and Kruk ME
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Rwanda epidemiology, Socioeconomic Factors, Maternal Health Services, Maternal-Child Health Services
- Abstract
Introduction: Achieving the maternal and child health (MCH)-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) will require equitable and effective (quality-adjusted) coverage of recommended health interventions in low- and middle-income countries. We assessed effective coverage and equity of MCH services in Rwanda in the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) era to help guide policy decisions to improve equitable health gains in the SDG era and beyond., Methods: Using four rounds of Rwanda demographic and health surveys conducted from 2000 to 2015, we identified coverage and quality indicators for five MCH services: antenatal care (ANC), delivery care, and care for child diarrhoea, suspected pneumonia and fever. We calculated crude coverage and quality in each survey and used these to estimate effective coverage. The effective coverage should be regarded as an upper bound because there were few available quality measures. We also described equity in effective coverage of these five MCH services over time across the wealth index, area of residence and maternal education using equiplots., Results: A total of 48 910 women aged 15-49 years and 33 429 children under 5 years were included across the four survey rounds. In 2015, average effective coverage was 33.2% (range 19.9%-44.2%) across all five MCH services, 30.1% (range 19.9%-40.2%) for maternal health services (average of ANC and delivery) and 35.3% (range 27.3%-44.2%) for sick child care (diarrhoea, pneumonia and fever). This is in contrast to crude coverage which averaged 56.5% (range 43.6%-90.7%) across all five MCH services, 67.3% (range 43.9%-90.7%) for maternal health services and 49.2% (range 43.6%-53.9%) for sick child care. Between 2010 and 2015 effective coverage increased by 154.2% (range 127.3%-170.0%) for maternal health services and by 27.4% (range 4.2%-79.6%) for sick child care. These increases were associated with widening socioeconomic inequalities in effective coverage for maternal health services, and narrowing inequalities in effective coverage for sick child care., Conclusion: While effective coverage of common MCH services generally improved in the MDG era, it still lagged substantially behind crude coverage for the same services due to low-quality care. Overall, effective coverage of MCH services remained suboptimal and inequitable. Policies should focus on improving effective coverage of these services and reducing inequities., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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42. Hospital-provision of essential primary care in 56 countries: determinants and quality.
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Arsenault C, Kim MK, Aryal A, Faye A, Joseph JP, Kassa M, Degfie TT, Yahya T, and Kruk ME
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- Child, Female, Hospitals, Public, Humans, Pregnancy, Quality of Health Care, Prenatal Care, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate the use of hospitals for four essential primary care services offered in health centres in low- and middle-income countries and to explore differences in quality between hospitals and health centres., Methods: We extracted data from all demographic and health surveys conducted since 2010 on the type of facilities used for obtaining contraceptives, routine antenatal care and care for minor childhood diarrhoea and cough or fever. Using mixed-effects logistic regression models we assessed associations between hospital use and individual and country-level covariates. We assessed competence of care based on the receipt of essential clinical actions during visits. We also analysed three indicators of user experience from countries with available service provision assessment survey data., Findings: On average across 56 countries, public hospitals were used as the sole source of care by 16.9% of 126 012 women who obtained contraceptives, 23.1% of 418 236 women who received routine antenatal care, 19.9% of 47 677 children with diarrhoea and 18.5% of 82 082 children with fever or cough. Hospital use was more common in richer countries with higher expenditures on health per capita and among urban residents and wealthier, better-educated women. Antenatal care quality was higher in hospitals in 44 countries. In a subset of eight countries, people using hospitals tended to spend more, report more problems and be somewhat less satisfied with the care received., Conclusion: As countries work towards achieving ambitious health goals, they will need to assess care quality and user preferences to deliver effective primary care services that people want to use., ((c) 2020 The authors; licensee World Health Organization.)
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- 2020
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43. Effect of vaccination on children's learning achievements: findings from the India Human Development Survey.
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Arsenault C, Harper S, and Nandi A
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- Child, Female, Humans, India, Infant, Surveys and Questionnaires, Educational Status, Schools, Vaccination
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Background: Beyond the prevention of illness and death, vaccination may provide additional benefits such as improved educational outcomes. However, there is currently little evidence on this question. Our objective was to estimate the effect of childhood vaccination on learning achievements among primary school children in India., Methods: We used cohort data from the India Human Development Survey. Vaccination status and confounders were measured among children who were at least 12 months old at baseline in 2004-2005. In 2011-2012, the same children completed basic reading, writing and math tests. We estimated the effect of full vaccination during childhood on learning achievements using inverse probability of treatment-weighted logistic regression models and results reported on the risk difference scale. The propensity score included 33 potential community-, household-, mother- and child-level confounders as well as state fixed effects., Results: Among the 4877 children included in our analysis, 54% were fully vaccinated at baseline, and 54% could read by the age of 8-11 years. The estimated effect of full vaccination on learning achievements ranged from 4 to 6 percentage points, representing relative increases ranging from 6% to 12%. Bias analysis suggested that our observed effects could be explained by unmeasured confounding, but only in the case of strong associations with the treatment and outcome., Conclusion: These results support the hypothesis that vaccination has lasting effects on children's learning achievements. Further work is needed to confirm findings and elucidate the potential mechanisms linking vaccines to educational outcomes., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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44. Determinants of healthcare providers' confidence in their clinical skills to deliver quality obstetric and newborn care in Uganda and Zambia.
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Kim MK, Arsenault C, Atuyambe LM, Macwan'gi M, and Kruk ME
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Pregnancy, Program Evaluation, Quality of Health Care, Self Efficacy, Uganda, Zambia, Clinical Competence standards, Health Personnel psychology, Infant Care standards, Obstetrics standards
- Abstract
Background: Poor quality obstetric and newborn care persists in sub-Saharan Africa and weak provider competence is an important contributor. To be competent, providers need to be both knowledgeable and confident in their ability to perform necessary clinical actions. Confidence or self-efficacy has not been extensively studied but may be related to individuals' knowledge, ability to practice their skills, and other modifiable factors. In this study, we investigated how knowledge and scope of practice are associated with provider confidence in delivering obstetric and newborn health services in Uganda and Zambia., Methods: This study was a secondary analysis of data from an obstetric and newborn care program implementation evaluation. Provider knowledge, scope of practice (completion of a series of obstetric tasks in the past 3 months) and confidence in delivering obstetric and newborn care were measured post intervention in intervention and comparison districts in Uganda and Zambia. We used multiple linear regression models to investigate the extent to which exposure to a wider range of clinical tasks associated with confidence, adjusting for facility and provider characteristics., Results: Of the 574 providers included in the study, 69% were female, 24% were nurses, and 6% were doctors. The mean confidence score was 71%. Providers' mean knowledge score was 56% and they reported performing 57% of basic obstetric tasks in the past 3 months. In the adjusted model, providers who completed more than 69% of the obstetric tasks reported a 13-percentage point (95% CI 0.08, 0.17) higher confidence than providers who performed less than 50% of the tasks. Female providers and nurses were considerably less confident than males and doctors. Provider knowledge was moderately associated with provider confidence., Conclusions: Our study showed that scope of practice (the range of clinical tasks routinely performed by providers) is an important determinant of confidence. Ensuring that providers are exposed to a variety of services is crucial to support improvement in provider confidence and competence. Policies to improve provider confidence and pre-service training should also address differences by gender and by cadres.
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- 2020
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45. Variation in competent and respectful delivery care in Kenya and Malawi: a retrospective analysis of national facility surveys.
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Arsenault C, English M, Gathara D, Malata A, Mandala W, and Kruk ME
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Delivery, Obstetric standards, Female, Health Facilities standards, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Kenya epidemiology, Malawi epidemiology, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care standards, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Delivery, Obstetric statistics & numerical data, Health Facilities statistics & numerical data, Prenatal Care statistics & numerical data, Quality Indicators, Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: Although substantial progress has been made in increasing access to care during childbirth, reductions in maternal and neonatal mortality have been slower. Poor-quality care may be to blame. In this study, we measure the quality of labour and delivery services in Kenya and Malawi using data from observations of deliveries and explore factors associated with levels of competent and respectful care., Methods: We used data from nationally representative health facility assessment surveys. A total of 1100 deliveries in 392 facilities across Kenya and Malawi were observed and quality was assessed using two indices: the quality of the process of intrapartum and immediate postpartum care (QoPIIPC) index and a previously validated index of respectful maternity care. Data from standardised observations of care were analysed using descriptive statistics and multivariable random-intercept regression models to examine factors associated with variation in quality of care. We also quantified the variance in quality explained by each domain of covariates (patient-, provider- and facility-level and subnational divisions)., Results: Only 61-66% of basic elements of competent and respectful care were performed. In adjusted models, better-staffed facilities, private hospitals and morning deliveries were associated with higher levels of competent and respectful care. In Malawi, younger, primipara and HIV-positive women received higher-quality care. Quality also differed substantially across regions in Kenya, with a 25 percentage-point gap between Nairobi and the Coast region. Quality was also higher in higher-volume facilities and those with caesarean section capacity. Most of the explained variance in quality was due to regions in Kenya and to facility, and patient-level characteristics in Malawi., Conclusions: Our findings suggest considerable scope for improvement in quality. Increasing staffing and shifting births to higher-volume facilities - along with promotion of respectful care in these facilities - should be considered in sub-Saharan Africa to improve outcomes for mothers and newborns., (© 2019 The Authors Tropical Medicine & International Health Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2020
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46. COMP Report: A survey of radiation safety regulations for medical imaging x-ray equipment in Canada.
- Author
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Bjarnason TA, Rees R, Kainz J, Le LH, Stewart EE, Preston B, Elbakri I, Fife IAJ, Lee TY, Gagnon IMB, Arsenault C, Therrien P, Kendall E, Tonkopi E, Cottreau M, and Aldrich JE
- Subjects
- Canada, Health Physics, Humans, Radiation Protection standards, Research Report, Surveys and Questionnaires, X-Rays, Diagnostic Imaging instrumentation, Diagnostic Imaging standards, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Radiation Protection legislation & jurisprudence, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted standards
- Abstract
X-ray regulations and room design methodology vary widely across Canada. The Canadian Organization of Medical Physicists (COMP) conducted a survey in 2016/2017 to provide a useful snapshot of existing variations in rules and methodologies for human patient medical imaging facilities. Some jurisdictions no longer have radiation safety regulatory requirements and COMP is concerned that lack of regulatory oversight might erode safe practices. Harmonized standards will facilitate oversight that will ensure continued attention is given to public safety and to control workplace exposure. COMP encourages all Canadian jurisdictions to adopt the dose limits and constraints outlined in Health Canada Safety Code 35 with the codicil that the design standards be updated to those outlined in NCRP 147 and BIR 2012., (© 2019 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
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- 2020
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47. Bayesian Evaluation of Solana HSV 1+2/VZV Assay Compared to Viral Culture and Commercial PCR Assay for Cutaneous or Mucocutaneous Specimens.
- Author
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Arsenault C, Camirand Lemyre F, Martin P, and Lévesque S
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- Bayes Theorem, Cell Culture Techniques, DNA, Viral analysis, Herpes Simplex genetics, Herpesvirus 1, Human genetics, Herpesvirus 2, Human genetics, Herpesvirus 3, Human genetics, Humans, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques methods, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Skin virology, Herpes Simplex diagnosis, Herpesvirus 1, Human isolation & purification, Herpesvirus 2, Human isolation & purification, Herpesvirus 3, Human isolation & purification, Skin Diseases, Viral diagnosis
- Abstract
Results from the Solana HSV 1+2/VZV assay for the detection of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), HSV-2, and varicella-zoster virus (VZV) in cutaneous or mucocutaneous specimens were compared with that of viral culture and a commercial PCR assay (RealStar alpha herpesvirus PCR kit). Three hundred two mucocutaneous specimens, for which HSV-1, HSV-2, or VZV viral culture or PCR detection have been requested, were randomly selected and prospectively processed on the Solana assay and viral culture or the RealStar assay. Discordant results between culture and the Solana assay were further analyzed using the RealStar assay. A Bayesian latent class model was developed to estimate the performance of each method. Viral culture detected 123 positive specimens (85 HSV-1, 36 HSV-2, and 2 VZV), while the Solana assay detected 27 additional positive specimens (4 HSV-1, 11 HSV-2, and 12 VZV), in agreement with the RealStar PCR assay. The estimated sensitivity of the Solana assay according to our model was 92.7% to 98.7%, 87.1% to 97.8%, and 94.9% to 98.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]) for HSV-1 HSV-2, and VZV, respectively, while the estimated sensitivity of viral culture was 85.2% to 95.0%, 73.6% to 89.6%, and 30.9% to 45.8% (95% CI), respectively. A nonsignificant tendency toward increased sensitivity was noted for the Solana assay compared with culture for HSV-1 and HSV-2, and the Solana assay was significantly more sensitive than culture for the detection of VZV. The Solana assay performed comparably to the RealStar assay. Processing time was reduced with the Solana assay compared with viral culture., (Copyright © 2020 American Society for Microbiology.)
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- 2020
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48. User experience and patient satisfaction with tuberculosis care in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review.
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Cazabon D, Pande T, Sen P, Daftary A, Arsenault C, Bhatnagar H, O'Brien K, and Pai M
- Abstract
Background: Patient-centered care is at the forefront of the End TB strategy, yet little is known about user (patient's) experience and patient satisfaction with TB services. Our study aims to systematically review quantitative studies evaluating user experience and TB patient satisfaction within the health care system., Methods: Five medical databases were systematically searched between January 1st, 2009 and December 31st, 2018. English studies assessing user experience and patient satisfaction within the healthcare system from a TB patient's perspective in low and middle-income countries, were included., Results: Thirty-five studies from 16 low and middle-income countries evaluated three major themes; facilities and patient centeredness ( n = 23), patient-provider relationship ( n = 22) and overall satisfaction ( n = 19). Overall study quality was low as they used varying tools to measure user experience and patient satisfaction., Conclusion: Our study shows large variability in measurement of user experiences and patient satisfaction. Studies reported that patients were mostly satisfied with TB care services, and those that were dissatisfied were substantially more likely to be lost to follow-up. The high satisfaction rates could have been due to lack of education on good quality patient care or fear of losing access to health care. A standardized patient centered tool could be designed to help assess user experience and patient satisfaction to allow comparisons among health systems and countries., Competing Interests: The authors do not have any conflicts of interest., (© 2020 The Author(s).)
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- 2020
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49. The efficacy of the Strength, Hope and Resourcefulness Program for people with Parkinson's disease (SHARP-PWP): A mixed methods study.
- Author
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Murdoch KC, Larsen D, Edey W, Arsenault C, Howell A, Joyce A, Sandham T, and Miyasaki JM
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- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hope, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personal Satisfaction, Qualitative Research, Quality of Life, Time Factors, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Parkinson Disease psychology, Parkinson Disease rehabilitation, Psychology, Positive, Psychotherapy methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Treatment of PD focuses on improving symptoms and quality of life, yet research has not examined interventions aimed at promoting hope in patients. This study examined the effects of a Strength, Hope, and Resources Program for People with PD (SHARP-PWP), based on the principles of positive psychology., Methods: A mixed method design examined the effects of a randomized, waitlist-controlled trial of SHARP-PWP. 31 PD patients diagnosed in the last 5 years (average age = 66; 13 men, 18 women) participated in a 6-session program. All participants completed self-report measures at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and 6-week follow-up. Data were analyzed using ANOVA. After the program, 15 participants completed a semi-structured interview. Qualitative interview data were analyzed using Interpretive Description., Results: No significant differences in improvement were found between the Immediate and Delayed intervention groups. However, significant effects for time (i.e., pre-treatment to post-treatment) were found for health-related quality of life and well-being in both Immediate and Delayed conditions. Additional quantitative analysis revealed significant improvement in both groups on hope from pre-treatment to follow-up. Qualitative findings revealed that clients identified social, emotional, behavioral and cognitive changes experienced in the group., Conclusions: Participating in positive psychology research improved health-related quality of life (HrQoL) and mental health and patients identified additional benefits at 6-week follow-up. Our results provide insight about the placebo effect and Hawthorne pre-placebo effects in the context of PD research. The findings can inform trial design and clinical care of patients with PD., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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50. Quality of Kangaroo Mother Care services in Ethiopia: Implications for policy and practice.
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Weldearegay HG, Medhanyie AA, Abrha MW, Tadesse L, Tekle E, Yakob B, Girma T, and Arsenault C
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- Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Health Facilities, Health Policy, Humans, Infant, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Logistic Models, Male, Survival Analysis, Infant Mortality, Kangaroo-Mother Care Method standards, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Providing high-quality kangaroo mother care (KMC) is a strategy proven to improve outcomes in premature babies. However, whether KMC is consistently and appropriately provided in Ethiopia is unclear. This study assesses the quality of KMC services in Ethiopia and the factors associated with its appropriate initiation among low birth weight neonates., Methods: We used data from the 2016 national Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (EmONC) assessment which contains data on all health facilities providing delivery care services in Ethiopia (N = 3,804). We described the quality of KMC services provided to low-birth weight (LBW) babies in terms of infrastructure, processes and outcomes (survival status at discharge). We also explored the factors associated with appropriate KMC initiation using multivariable logistic regression models., Results: The quality of KMC services in Ethiopia was poor. The facilities included scored only 59.0% on average on a basic index of service readiness. KMC was initiated for only 46.4% of all LBW babies included in the sample. Among those who received KMC, 66.7% survived, 13.3% died and 20.4% had no data on survival status at discharge. LBW babies born in health centers were twice more likely to receive KMC compared to those born in hospitals (AOR = 2.0, 95% CI: 1.3-3.0). Public facilities, those with a staff rotation policy in place for newborn care, and those with separate newborn corners were also more likely to initiate KMC for LBW babies., Conclusions: We found low levels of appropriate KMC initiation, inadequate infrastructure and staffing, and poor survival among LBW babies in Ethiopia. Efforts must be made to improve the adoption of this life saving technique, particularly in hospitals and in the private sector where KMC remains underutilized. Facilities should also dedicate specific spaces for newborn care that enables mothers to provide KMC. In addition, improving record keeping and data quality for routine health data is a priority., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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