Abstract
BackgroundData collection techniques that routinely provide health system information at the local level are in demand and needed. LQAS is intended for use by local health teams to collect data at the district and sub-district levels. Our question is whether local health staff produce biased results as they are responsible for implementing the programs they also assess.MethodsThis test-retest study replicates on a larger scale an earlier LQAS reliability assessment in Uganda. We conducted in two districts an LQAS survey using 15 local health staff as data collectors. A week later, the data collectors swapped districts, where they acted as disinterested non-local data collectors, repeating the LQAS survey with the same respondents. We analysed the resulting two data sets for agreement using Cohens’ Kappa.ResultsThe average Kappa score for the knowledge indicators was k = 0.43 (SD = 0.16) and for practice indicators k = 0.63 (SD = 0.17). These scores show moderate agreement for knowledge indicators and substantial agreement for practice indicators. Analyses confirm that respondents were more knowledgeable on retest; no evidence of bias was found for practice indicators.ConclusionThe findings of this study are remarkably similar to those produced in the first reliability study. There is no evidence that using local healthcare staff to collect LQAS data biases data collection in an LQAS study. The bias observed in the knowledge indicators was most likely due to a ‘practice effect’, whereby respondents increased their knowledge as a result of completing the first survey; no corresponding effect was seen in the practice indicators.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12913-016-1655-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Data collection techniques that routinely provide health system information at the local level are in demand and needed
None of the 26 results analysed for the practice indicators had a p value ≤0.05
We found evidence of bias for the knowledge indicators but not the practice indicators, as the respondents were more knowledgeable on the retest when interviewed by noninterested data collectors
Summary
Data collection techniques that routinely provide health system information at the local level are in demand and needed. LQAS is intended for use by local health teams to collect data at the district and sub-district levels. Routine health management information systems (HMIS) can provide valuable health service demand-side information, but being a convenience sample is inadequate for measuring coverage and supporting related programmatic decisionmaking [3]. Whilst macro-level surveys provide detailed high quality information, they do not provide the local-level information that is necessary for local program management. More research about data collection techniques which can routinely provide information at the local level is in demand and needed [1]. Lot Quality Assurance Sampling (LQAS) may contribute to satisfying this need [4]
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