Five lessons from a mid-level health manager intervention to increase uptake of tuberculosis prevention therapy in Uganda: 'it is a completely different thing to implement what you know.'

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Global Health Action Pub Date : 2024-12-31 Epub Date: 2024-11-18 DOI:10.1080/16549716.2024.2427434
Jason Johnson-Peretz, Canice Christian, Cecilia Akatukwasa, Fred Atwine, Elijah Kakande, Moses R Kamya, Diane V Havlir, Carol S Camlin, Gabriel Chamie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Leadership skills are essential for middle-level healthcare manager efficacy. Capacity-building efforts may attempt behavioural change by filling 'knowledge gaps' while neglecting a sustainable application of that knowledge. Sustainable application of that knowledge, or implementation know-how, must resonate with local cultural patterns. When it is neglected, root issues like unclear decision-making space and local authority to interpret policy during implementation remain unaddressed. Particularly in decentralized healthcare systems, the impact can appear in implementation challenges, subjective decision-making, poor teamwork, and an absence of disseminating best practices.

Objectives: The SEARCH-IPT trial led a series of mini-collaborative meetings, which provided business leadership and management training for an intervention group of mid-level healthcare system managers in rural Eastern, East-Central, and Southwestern Uganda to see whether this would increase uptake of isoniazid-prevention therapy (IPT) for people living with HIV (PLHIV) in intervention districts. IPT is known to reduce active tuberculosis (TB), a leading cause of death among PLHIV, by 40-60%.

Methods: We performed a thematic analysis of six focus-group discussions from this intervention (held in May 2019, January 2020, September 2021) and 23 key informant interviews with control group participants (between February and August 2019 and September and December 2020).

Results: Analysis revealed five implementation skill sets District Health Officers (DHOs) and District Tuberculosis and Leprosy Supervisors (DTLSs) deployed to achieve sustainable implementation and realize their decision-making space. The five practices were as follows: data-based decision-making, root-cause analysis, quality assurance, evidence-based empowerment, and sharing best practices with colleagues.

Conclusion: These practices reached beyond outcome measures to address root problems around the DHO's range of authority and elicit buy-in from district health workers. For successful capacity building at the mid-manager level, focusing on core practices as part of competency is objectively implementable and measurable at the system level and does not rely on DHO self-assessments.

从乌干达中层健康管理者为提高结核病预防疗法的使用率而采取的干预措施中汲取的五条经验:"实施你所知道的是完全不同的事情。
背景:领导技能对中层医疗管理人员的效率至关重要。能力建设工作可能会试图通过填补 "知识空白 "来改变行为,但却忽视了知识的可持续应用。知识的可持续应用或实施诀窍必须与当地文化模式产生共鸣。如果忽视了这一点,那么诸如决策空间不明确、地方在实施过程中对政策的解释权等根本问题就无法得到解决。特别是在权力下放的医疗系统中,其影响可能表现为实施挑战、主观决策、团队合作不力以及缺乏对最佳实践的传播:SEARCH-IPT 试验领导了一系列小型合作会议,为乌干达东部、中东部和西南部农村地区的中层医疗保健系统管理人员干预小组提供业务领导力和管理培训,以了解这是否会提高干预地区艾滋病病毒感染者(PLHIV)对异烟肼预防疗法(IPT)的接受率。据了解,异烟肼预防疗法可将活动性肺结核(TB)--艾滋病病毒感染者的主要死因--降低 40-60%:我们对该干预项目中的六次焦点小组讨论(分别于 2019 年 5 月、2020 年 1 月和 2021 年 9 月举行)以及与对照组参与者的 23 次关键信息提供者访谈(分别于 2019 年 2 月至 8 月以及 2020 年 9 月至 12 月举行)进行了专题分析:分析显示,地区卫生官员(DHOs)和地区结核病与麻风病督导员(DTLSs)部署了五套实施技能,以实现可持续实施并实现其决策空间。这五种做法如下:基于数据的决策、根本原因分析、质量保证、基于证据的授权以及与同事分享最佳做法:这些做法超越了结果衡量标准,解决了区卫生局局长权力范围内的根本问题,并获得了地区卫生工作者的认同。为了在中层管理者层面成功开展能力建设,将核心实践作为能力建设的一部分,在系统层面是客观可实施和可衡量的,并且不依赖于区卫生官员的自我评估。
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来源期刊
Global Health Action
Global Health Action PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
108
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Health Action is an international peer-reviewed Open Access journal affiliated with the Unit of Epidemiology and Global Health, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University, Sweden. The Unit hosts the Umeå International School of Public Health and the Umeå Centre for Global Health Research. Vision: Our vision is to be a leading journal in the global health field, narrowing health information gaps and contributing to the implementation of policies and actions that lead to improved global health. Aim: The widening gap between the winners and losers of globalisation presents major public health challenges. To meet these challenges, it is crucial to generate new knowledge and evidence in the field and in settings where the evidence is lacking, as well as to bridge the gaps between existing knowledge and implementation of relevant findings. Thus, the aim of Global Health Action is to contribute to fuelling a more concrete, hands-on approach to addressing global health challenges. Manuscripts suggesting strategies for practical interventions and research implementations where none already exist are specifically welcomed. Further, the journal encourages articles from low- and middle-income countries, while also welcoming articles originated from South-South and South-North collaborations. All articles are expected to address a global agenda and include a strong implementation or policy component.
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