实施基于技术的流动产科转诊急救系统(MORES):对利比里亚农村地区卫生工作者的定性评估。

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Christopher W Reynolds, HaEun Lee, Joseph Sieka, Joseph Perosky, Jody R Lori
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在低收入和中等收入国家,孕产妇死亡仍是一个持续存在的挑战,在这些国家,以证据为基础的产科分诊和院前沟通干预措施仍然很少。在这种情况下,以技术为基础的产科护理改善方法的实施证据有限。利比里亚的孕产妇死亡率居高不下,尤其是在农村地区,由于缺乏分诊和医院间沟通而造成的延误导致了死亡。我们在邦州农村地区实施了移动产科转诊急救系统(MORES),以改善危重产科病人的院前转运、医护人员的关注度和病人护理。MORES包括分诊培训和一个双向、模板化的WhatsApp通信系统,以减少从农村医疗机构(RHF)转送到医院的病人的延误:本研究旨在考察 MORES 在可用性、忠实性、有效性、可持续性和可扩展性方面的实施成果,以及对更广泛的医疗系统产生的其他影响:方法:利比里亚和美国的产科分诊专家制定了结构化案例研究设计访谈。参与者包括 62 名一线产科医疗服务提供者,其中包括助产士(38/62,61%)、护士(20/62,32%)、医生助理(3/62,5%)和医生(1/62,2%),他们分别来自 19 家地区医疗机构和 2 家地区医院,已使用 MORES 一年。就 MORES 的实施结果进行了个人访谈,访谈内容在 NVivo(第 12 版;Lumivero)中进行了转录和分析,并采用了基于团队的编码方法。内容分析采用演绎法,考察了可用性、忠实性、有效性、可持续性和可扩展性等实施成果,而归纳法则对 MORES 对更广泛的卫生系统产生的意外影响进行了分类:结果:关于 MORES 的实施,确定了四个领域:结果:确定了有关 MORES 实施的四个领域:可用性和忠实性、有效性、可持续性和可扩展性以及对卫生系统的影响。所有参与者都认为 MORES 具有很高的可用性和忠实性,因为该分流和信息传递系统已按计划用于危重产科病人(62/62,100%)。在有效性方面,MORES 通过改善院前转运(57/62,92%)、提高医护人员的关注度(39/62,63%)和改善患者护理(34/62,55%)实现了预期目标。人们认为 MORES 具有可持续性和可扩展性(62/62,100%),尤其是在技术障碍(21/62,34%)和人员培训(19/62,31%)得到解决的情况下。MORES 对更广泛的医疗系统产生了意想不到的影响,包括改善了协调和问责制(55/62,89%)、医院和区域医疗中心的反馈机制(48/62,77%)、跨专业团队合作(21/62,34%)、纵向后续护理(20/62,32%)、创建护理延迟记录(17/62,27%)和电子健康记录基础设施(13/62,21%):利比里亚农村的一线产科医生认为 MORES 具有很高的可用性、忠实性、有效性、可持续性和可扩展性。MORES 达到了预期目标,即改善院前转运、提高医护人员的关注度并有助于改善病人护理。此外,MORES 还通过影响个人和系统水平的 6 个领域加强了医疗系统。未来的研究应定量评估延误和发病率的减少情况,以及推广 MORES 的策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implementation of a Technology-Based Mobile Obstetric Referral Emergency System (MORES): Qualitative Assessment of Health Workers in Rural Liberia.

Background: Maternal mortality remains a persistent challenge in low- and middle-income countries, where evidence-based interventions of obstetric triage and prehospital communication remain sparse. There is limited implementation evidence for technology-based approaches to improve obstetric care in such contexts. Liberia struggles with maternal mortality, particularly in rural areas where deaths are attributable to delays from absent triage and interfacility communication. We implemented a Mobile Obstetric Referral Emergency System (MORES) in rural Bong County to improve prehospital transfer, health worker attentiveness, and patient care for critical obstetric patients. MORES consisted of triage training and a 2-way, templated WhatsApp communication system to reduce delays among patients transferred from rural health facilities (RHF) to hospitals.

Objective: This study aimed to examine MORES implementation outcomes of usability, fidelity, effectiveness, sustainability, and scalability, as well as additional impacts on the wider health system.

Methods: A structured case study design interview was developed by Liberian and US experts in obstetric triage. Participants included 62 frontline obstetric health providers including midwives (38/62, 61%), nurses (20/62, 32%), physicians assistants (3/62, 5%), and physicians (1/62, 2%) from 19 RHFs and 2 district hospitals who had used MORES for 1 year. Individual interviews were conducted on MORES implementation outcomes, transcribed, and analyzed in NVivo (version 12; Lumivero) with a team-based coding methodology. Content analysis with a deductive approach examined implementation outcomes of usability, fidelity, effectiveness, sustainability, and scalability, while an inductive approach categorized the unanticipated impacts of MORES on the wider health system.

Results: Four domains were identified regarding MORES implementation: Usability and Fidelity, Effectiveness, Sustainability and Scalability, and Health System Impact. All participants perceived MORES to have high usability and fidelity, as the triage and messaging system was implemented as intended for critical obstetric patients (62/62, 100%). For effectiveness, MORES accomplished its intended aims by improving prehospital transfer (57/62, 92%), increasing health worker attentiveness (39/62, 63%), and contributing to improved patient care (34/62, 55%). MORES was perceived as sustainable and scalable (62/62, 100%), particularly if technological barriers (21/62, 34%) and staff training (19/62, 31%) were addressed. MORES impacted the wider health system in unanticipated ways including improved coordination and accountability (55/62, 89%), feedback mechanisms for hospitals and RHFs (48/62, 77%), interprofessional teamwork (21/62, 34%), longitudinal follow-up care (20/62, 32%), creating a record of care delays (17/62, 27%), and electronic health record infrastructure (13/62, 21%).

Conclusions: MORES was perceived to have high usability, fidelity, effectiveness, sustainability, and scalability by frontline obstetric providers in rural Liberia. MORES accomplished the intended aims of improving prehospital transfer, increasing health worker attentiveness, and contributing to improved patient care. Additionally, MORES strengthened the health system through 6 domains which impacted individual and system levels. Future studies should quantitatively evaluate delay and morbidity reductions and strategies for scaling MORES.

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来源期刊
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
JMIR mHealth and uHealth Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
12.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
159
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR mHealth and uHealth (JMU, ISSN 2291-5222) is a spin-off journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR mHealth and uHealth is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, and Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), and in June 2017 received a stunning inaugural Impact Factor of 4.636. The journal focusses on health and biomedical applications in mobile and tablet computing, pervasive and ubiquitous computing, wearable computing and domotics. JMIR mHealth and uHealth publishes since 2013 and was the first mhealth journal in Pubmed. It publishes even faster and has a broader scope with including papers which are more technical or more formative/developmental than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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