Abstract

Background: In 2014, a pilot study was conducted to test the feasibility of linking clinic attendance data for young adults at two health facilities to the population register of the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS). This was part of a cross-sectional survey of health problems of young people, and we tested the feasibility of using the KHDSS platform for the monitoring of future interventions. Methods: Two facilities were used for this study. Clinical data from consenting participants aged 18-24 years were matched to KHDSS records. Data matching was achieved using national identity card numbers or otherwise using a matching algorithm based on names, sex, date of birth, location of residence and the names of other homestead members. A study form was administered to all matched patients to capture reasons for their visits and time taken to access the services. Distance to health facility from a participants' homestead was also computed. Results: 628 participated in the study: 386 (61%) at Matsangoni Health Centre, and 242 (39%) at Pingilikani Dispensary. 610 (97%) records were matched to the KHDSS register. Most records (605; 96%) were matched within these health facilities, while 5 (1%) were matched during homestead follow-up visits. 463 (75.9%) of those matched were women. Antenatal care (25%), family planning (13%), respiratory infections (9%) and malaria (9%) were the main reasons for seeking care. Antenatal clinic visits (n=175) and malaria (n=27) were the commonest reasons among women and men, respectively. Participants took 1-1.5 hours to access the services; 490 (81.0%) participants lived within 5 kilometres of a facility. Conclusions: With a full-time research clerk at each health facility, linking health-facility attendance data to a longitudinal HDSS platform was feasible and could be used to monitor and evaluate the impact of health interventions on health care outcomes among young people.

Highlights

  • Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) provide longitudinal information on populations living within geographically-defined areas, including data on fertility, mortality and migration[1,2,3]

  • The two facilities are far apart; Pingilikani dispensary is in the southern part with a catchment population fully within the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS) while Matsangoni health centre is situated in the northern part of the KHDSS area and its catchment population straddles the boundary of the DSS area

  • The homestead visits revealed that none of the 18 participants we failed to match were in the KHDSS population register

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Summary

Introduction

Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) provide longitudinal information on populations living within geographically-defined areas, including data on fertility, mortality and migration[1,2,3]. These data can be useful to public health policy makers both locally and internationally[2,3,4,5]. In 2014, a pilot study was conducted to test the feasibility of linking clinic attendance data for young adults at two health facilities to the population register of the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS). Conclusions: With a full-time research clerk at each health facility, linking health-facility attendance data to a longitudinal HDSS platform was feasible version 2 (revision)

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