Long and Short Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) Training Courses in Afghanistan: A Cross-sectional Cohort Comparison of Post-Course Knowledge and Performance

Publish Year: 1394
نوع سند: مقاله ژورنالی
زبان: English
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JR_HPM-4-3_005

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 16 مرداد 1403

Abstract:

Background In ۲۰۰۳ the Afghan Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) adopted the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) for delivering child health services in primary care facilities. Key problems were subsequently identified: high cost of training, frequent health worker turnover and poor quality of IMCI implementation by those trained – specifically in the use of job aids and protocols for assessment, classification, treatment and counselling. The high financial, human resources and opportunity costs of implementing IMCI spurred the MoPH to prioritize developing a shortened IMCI course of comparable quality to the ۱۱-Day training.   Methods This cross-sectional evaluation compared knowledge before and after training, and health worker performance in assessment, classification and treatment of sick children in two similar cohorts, eight months post-training.   Results The mean increase in knowledge scores of the thirty ۷-Day course trainees was ۲۹ [۹۵% Confidence Interval (CI): ۲۴, ۳۴] compared to ۲۳ (۹۵% CI: ۱۸, ۲۸) in the ۳۱ trained in the ۱۱-Day course. During assessment visits, mean scores in the ۷-Day course trainees and the ۱۱-Day course trainees were ۹۳% (۹۵% CI: ۹۱, ۹۵) versus ۹۴% (۹۵% CI: ۹۱, ۹۶) in assessment; ۹۵% (۹۵% CI: ۸۹, ۱۰۰) versus ۹۶% (۹۵% CI: ۹۱, ۱۰۰) in classification; ۹۵% (۹۵% CI: ۹۲, ۱۰۰) versus ۹۷% (۹۵% CI: ۹۵, ۱۰۰) in treatment; and ۸۱% (۹۵% CI: ۷۶, ۸۶) versus ۸۰% (۹۵% CI: ۷۵, ۸۵) in counselling. The ۷-Day course was ۳۶% less expensive than the ۱۱-Day course. For each course opportunity costs, measured as numbers of children who potentially received poorer care than usual during trainee absence, were ۳,۱۶۰ for the ۱۱-Day course and ۲,۰۱۶ for the ۷-Day course. This measure was chosen because trainee absence commonly resulted in higher patient volumes per remaining provider or complete closure of a health facility with one single health worker.   Conclusion Given similar performance and knowledge of health workers trained in both courses, potential cost savings, the possibility of training more health workers and the relative ease with which health workers in remote settings might participate in a shorter course, it seems prudent to standardize the ۷-Day course in Afghanistan where child mortality rates remain unacceptably high.

Keywords:

Child Health , Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) , In-Service , Training , Afghanistan

Authors

Maureen Mayhew

School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

Paul Ickx

BASICS/Afghanistan and Centre for Health Services, Management Sciences for Health, Medford, MA, USA

William Newbrander

BASICS/Afghanistan and Centre for Health Services, Management Sciences for Health, Medford, MA, USA

Hedayatullah Stanekzai

BASICS/Afghanistan, Ministry of Public Health, Great Massoud Circle, Kabul, Afghanistan

Sayed Alawi

Child and Adolescent Health Department, Ministry of Public Health, Kabul, Afghanistan

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