Coaching visits and supportive supervision for primary care facilities to improve malaria service data quality in Ghana: An intervention case study.

PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-06-06 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0003649
Amos Asiedu, Rachel A Haws, Wahjib Mohammed, Joseph Boye-Doe, Charles Agblanya, Raphael Ntumy, Keziah Malm, Paul Boateng, Gladys Tetteh, Lolade Oseni
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Abstract

Effective decision-making for malaria prevention and control depends on timely, accurate, and appropriately analyzed and interpreted data. Poor quality data reported into national health management information systems (HMIS) prevent managers at the district level from planning effectively for malaria in Ghana. We analyzed reports from a series of 3 data coaching visits conducted at 231 health facilities in six of Ghana's 16 regions between February and November 2021. The visits targeted health workers' knowledge and skills in malaria data recording, HMIS reporting, and how managers visualized and used HMIS data for planning and decision making. A before-after design was used to assess how data coaching visits affected data documentation practices and compliance with standards of practice, quality and completeness of national HMIS data, and use of facility-based malaria indicator wall charts for decision-making at health facilities. The percentage of health workers demonstrating good understanding of standards of practice in documentation, reporting and data use increased from 72 to 83% (p < 0.05). By the second coaching visit, reliability of HMIS data entry increased from 29 to 65% (p < 0.001); precision increased from 48 to 78% (p < 0.001); and timeliness of reporting increased from 67 to 88% (p < 0.001). HMIS data showed statistically significant improvement in data completeness (from 62 to 87% (p < 0.001)) and decreased error rate (from 37 to 18% (p < 0.001)) after completion of the coaching visit series. By the third coaching visit, 98% of facilities had a functional data management system (a 26-percentage-point increase from the second to third coaching visit, p < 0.0001), 77% of facilities displayed wall charts, and 63% reported using data for decision-making and local planning. There are few documented examples of data coaching to improve malaria surveillance and service data quality. Data coaching provides support and mentorship to improve data quality, visualization, and use, modeling how other malaria programs can use HMIS data effectively at the local level.

指导访问和支持监督初级保健设施,以提高加纳疟疾服务数据质量:干预案例研究。
疟疾预防和控制的有效决策取决于及时、准确和适当分析和解释的数据。向国家卫生管理信息系统(HMIS)报告的低质量数据妨碍了加纳地区一级的管理人员有效规划疟疾。我们分析了2021年2月至11月期间在加纳16个地区中的6个地区的231家卫生机构进行的一系列3次数据指导访问的报告。访问的目标是卫生工作者在疟疾数据记录、卫生管理信息系统报告方面的知识和技能,以及管理人员如何将卫生管理信息系统数据可视化并用于规划和决策。采用了事前-事后设计,以评估数据指导访问如何影响数据文件编制做法和遵守惯例标准、国家卫生保健信息系统数据的质量和完整性,以及在卫生设施决策中使用基于设施的疟疾指标挂图。对文件、报告和数据使用方面的实践标准表现出良好理解的卫生工作者的百分比从72%增加到83%
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