Abstract

Background: Integration of services in primary health care settings can provide mother/baby pairs with all required services at one visit. This study aimed to evaluate a proof of concept, quality improvement (QI) intervention to strengthen well-child service provision and integration with maternal health services in five rural clinics in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.Methods: Quantitative cross-sectional surveys were conducted among mothers bringing their child for well-child services, before and after implementation of the intervention. Exit interviews and reviews of the child’s Road to Health Booklet (RTHB) were conducted to determine services provided at the visit, and the time spent in the clinic was observed and recorded.Results: A total of 413 exit interviews and record reviews were conducted (123 at baseline and 290 at follow-up). At follow-up, significantly more mothers were tested for HIV during the well-child visit (9.2% vs. 22.6%; p = 0.045) and significantly more mothers received ART (3.7% vs. 35.5%; p = 0.010). However, coverage of growth-monitoring services remained low and there was no difference in infant feeding advice provided to mothers at baseline and follow-up (49.5% vs. 49.7%; p = 0.996). More mothers interacted with a registered nurse at follow-up than at baseline (35.8% vs. 80.7%; p = 0.032).Conclusions: Over the implementation period of the QI intervention, improvement was shown in coverage and quality of some maternal health and HIV services, but there was no improvement in growth monitoring. This suggests that QI has the potentialto improve integration of service delivery, but this was a small study and further research is recommended.

Highlights

  • Discourse around integration and the provision of integrated services has gained momentum in health literature,[1,2,3] around the integration of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services with routine services for mothers and children.[4]

  • In South Africa, when patients come to a primary health care (PHC) clinic, health workers should provide the patient with a complete package of preventative, promotive and curative care

  • We report the evaluation results of this proof-ofconcept intervention to investigate whether a quality improvement intervention could improve implementation of integrated MCWH and HIV/PMTCT services in one sub-district in KwaZulu-Natal

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Summary

Introduction

Discourse around integration and the provision of integrated services has gained momentum in health literature,[1,2,3] around the integration of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services with routine services for mothers and children.[4]. This study aimed to evaluate a proof of concept, quality improvement (QI) intervention to strengthen well-child service provision and integration with maternal health services in five rural clinics in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Conclusions: Over the implementation period of the QI intervention, improvement was shown in coverage and quality of some maternal health and HIV services, but there was no improvement in growth monitoring. This suggests that QI has the potential to improve integration of service delivery, but this was a small study and further research is recommended

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