Abstract

BackgroundWe have conducted an intervention study aiming to improve hospital care for children and newborns in Kenya. In judging whether an intervention achieves its aims, an understanding of how it is delivered is essential. Here, we describe how the implementation team delivered the intervention over 18 months and provide some insight into how health workers, the primary targets of the intervention, received it.MethodsWe used two approaches. First, a description of the intervention is based on an analysis of records of training, supervisory and feedback visits to hospitals, and brief logs of key topics discussed during telephone calls with local hospital facilitators. Record keeping was established at the start of the study for this purpose with analyses conducted at the end of the intervention period. Second, we planned a qualitative study nested within the intervention project and used in-depth interviews and small group discussions to explore health worker and facilitators' perceptions of implementation. After thematic analysis of all interview data, findings were presented, discussed, and revised with the help of hospital facilitators.ResultsFour hospitals received the full intervention including guidelines, training and two to three monthly support supervision and six monthly performance feedback visits. Supervisor visits, as well as providing an opportunity for interaction with administrators, health workers, and facilitators, were often used for impromptu, limited refresher training or orientation of new staff. The personal links that evolved with senior staff seemed to encourage local commitment to the aims of the intervention. Feedback seemed best provided as open meetings and discussions with administrators and staff. Supervision, although sometimes perceived as fault finding, helped local facilitators become the focal point of much activity including key roles in liaison, local monitoring and feedback, problem solving, and orientation of new staff to guidelines. In four control hospitals receiving a minimal intervention, local supervision and leadership to implement new guidelines, despite their official introduction, were largely absent.ConclusionThe actual content of an intervention and how it is implemented and received may be critical determinants of whether it achieves its aims. We have carefully described our intervention approach to facilitate appraisal of the quantitative results of the intervention's effect on quality of care. Our findings suggest ongoing training, external supportive supervision, open feedback, and local facilitation may be valuable additions to more typical in-service training approaches, and may be feasible.

Highlights

  • We have undertaken an intervention study to evaluate whether a multifaceted intervention aimed at implementing evidence based clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and improving the quality of care works in Kenyan hospitals.The study included eight Kenyan district hospitals from four of the country's eight provinces selected to be broadly representative of this facility type

  • We reviewed literature describing and defining different aspects of supervision and feedback and aspects of the intervention we thought would be important for promoting improvements in the quality of paediatric care during the sustained intervention [3,4,5,6,7,8]. Based on these reports and earlier experience exploring the barriers to guideline use in the same hospitals, we developed a semi-structured interview guide to explore health workers' perceptions of the different forms of feedback provided, their experience of supervision provided by the implementing team, and their experience and views on the role and value of the facilitator present in intervention hospitals

  • We have previously described in detail the training (ETAT+) provided to intervention hospitals [10]

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Summary

Introduction

We have undertaken an intervention study to evaluate whether a multifaceted intervention aimed at implementing evidence based clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and improving the quality of care works in Kenyan hospitals.The study included eight Kenyan district hospitals from four of the country's eight provinces selected to be broadly representative of this facility type. We have undertaken an intervention study to evaluate whether a multifaceted intervention aimed at implementing evidence based clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and improving the quality of care works in Kenyan hospitals. Measuring whether the intervention results in changes in structure and process aspects of the provision of care for children and newborns will be based on the findings of six-month surveys that assess predominantly structural and process aspects of care. Interpreting these results and considering their generalisability should, take into consideration how well the intervention was delivered, and whether it was locally acceptable that are described here. We describe how the implementation team delivered the intervention over 18 months and provide some insight into how health workers, the primary targets of the intervention, received it

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