Abstract

BackgroundThe overall burden of disease (BOD) especially for infectious diseases is higher in Sub-Saharan Africa than other regions of the world. Existing data collected through the Health Management Information System (HMIS) may not be optimal to measure BOD. The Infectious Diseases Capacity Building Evaluation (IDCAP) cooperated with the Ugandan Ministry of Health to improve the quality of HMIS data. We describe diagnoses with associated clinical assessments and laboratory investigations of outpatients attending primary care in Uganda.MethodsIDCAP supported HMIS data collection at 36 health center IVs in Uganda for five months (November 2009 to March 2010) prior to implementation of the IDCAP interventions. Descriptive analyses were performed on a cross-sectional dataset of 209,734 outpatient visits during this period.ResultsOver 500 illnesses were diagnosed. Infectious diseases accounted for 76.3% of these and over 30% of visits resulted in multiple diagnoses. Malaria (48.3%), cough/cold (19.4%), and intestinal worms (6.6%) were the most frequently diagnosed illnesses. Body weight was recorded for 36.8% of patients and less than 10% had other clinical assessments recorded. Malaria smears (64.2%) and HIV tests (12.2%) accounted for the majority of 84,638 laboratory tests ordered. Fewer than 30% of patients for whom a laboratory investigation was available to confirm the clinical impression had the specific test performed.ConclusionsWe observed a broad range of diagnoses, a high percentage of multiple diagnoses including true co-morbidities, and underutilization of laboratory support. This emphasizes the complexity of illnesses to be addressed by primary healthcare workers. An improved HMIS collecting timely, quality data is needed. This would adequately describe the burden of disease and processes of care at primary care level, enable appropriate national guidelines, programs and policies and improve accountability for the quality of care.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2296-15-165) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The overall burden of disease (BOD) especially for infectious diseases is higher in Sub-Saharan Africa than other regions of the world

  • Despite recent reductions in both morbidity and mortality, the burden of diseases (BOD) in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) remains high when compared with the rest of the world, due to the high burden of infectious diseases [1]

  • We present a review of outpatient visit records from primary care facilities in Uganda from November 2009 to March 2010

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Summary

Introduction

The overall burden of disease (BOD) especially for infectious diseases is higher in Sub-Saharan Africa than other regions of the world. There has been an Little is know about the spectrum of clinical diagnoses encountered at primary care facilities in many SSA countries, including Uganda. Organizations such as the World Bank, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation [1], the World Health Organization [7], and others [2,3,4,5] utilize routine health information systems, alongside national representative household surveys and health and demographic surveillance sites, for assessing, estimating and documenting global, regional, country and disease specific BOD [8]. The Uganda MoH Resource Centre has the overall responsibility for processing national data collected through the HMIS and use these data to compile annual health sector performance reports [16] statistical abstracts [17] and policy formulation

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