Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight

Abstract Background Laboratory diagnostic testing service delivery and compliance with international standards for laboratory quality are directly influenced by laboratory workforce competency. Many hospital laboratories in constrained resource settings such as Cambodia struggle to cope with the tra...

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Main Authors: Siew Kim Ong, Grant T. Donovan, Nayah Ndefru, Sophanna Song, Chhayheng Leang, Sophat Sek, Michael Noble, Lucy A. Perrone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00521-8
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language English
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author Siew Kim Ong
Grant T. Donovan
Nayah Ndefru
Sophanna Song
Chhayheng Leang
Sophat Sek
Michael Noble
Lucy A. Perrone
spellingShingle Siew Kim Ong
Grant T. Donovan
Nayah Ndefru
Sophanna Song
Chhayheng Leang
Sophat Sek
Michael Noble
Lucy A. Perrone
Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
Human Resources for Health
Laboratory quality management systems
Laboratory in-service training
Training methodology
Laboratory mentoring
Laboratory tele-mentoring
author_facet Siew Kim Ong
Grant T. Donovan
Nayah Ndefru
Sophanna Song
Chhayheng Leang
Sophat Sek
Michael Noble
Lucy A. Perrone
author_sort Siew Kim Ong
title Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
title_short Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
title_full Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
title_fullStr Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
title_full_unstemmed Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
title_sort strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversight
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background Laboratory diagnostic testing service delivery and compliance with international standards for laboratory quality are directly influenced by laboratory workforce competency. Many hospital laboratories in constrained resource settings such as Cambodia struggle to cope with the training needs of laboratory professionals in an environment of competing healthcare development priorities. Resource-limited countries need an adaptable and effective approach to provide laboratory professionals with job-specific quality oversight training to ensure the accuracy, timeliness, and reliability of diagnostic services. Case presentation Here, we describe the results of an in-service training and mentoring program conducted with the Cambodia Ministry of Health at 12 tertiary-level hospital laboratories to drive improvements in laboratory quality management systems toward ISO 15189 accreditation, which demonstrated significant progress between baseline and outcome audits in a concurrent study. This case study describes the program, and evaluates how the four primary activities, including actionable gap assessments and planning, centralized and in situ training curriculum, in-person mentoring, and remote tele-mentoring via video communication technologies, contributed towards quality improvement in the participating laboratories. We evaluated participant responses to Likert scale and free response questions from program and training evaluation surveys, and we used thematic analysis to develop a model of best practices within the program’s four primary activities to inform future training approaches. Of these activities, participants agreed most highly that in-person visits and planning based on gap assessments contributed to their learning and ability to improve laboratory operations. Tele-mentoring was rated lowest by participants, who were critical of excessive group dialogue and distraction during web-conferencing; however, feedback suggests both in-person and remote mentoring contribute to continuing education, accountability to action, and peer collaboration and problem solving to improve workforce efforts toward improved quality management systems. Conclusions We recommend here a package of in-service training activities for laboratory quality management system improvement initiatives in resource constrained settings that includes needs-based curricula and personalized action plans for participants; interactive and on-site training workshops; and in-person mentoring, complemented with well managed and regular tele-mentoring that focuses on knowledge retention, accountability to goals, and collaborative problem solving. Our model presents an adaptable approach to human resource development for quality improvement in medical laboratories.
topic Laboratory quality management systems
Laboratory in-service training
Training methodology
Laboratory mentoring
Laboratory tele-mentoring
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00521-8
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spelling doaj-2861e628dd6247a4a6d11facb080ac592020-11-25T03:59:56ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912020-11-011811910.1186/s12960-020-00521-8Strengthening the clinical laboratory workforce in Cambodia: a case study of a mixed-method in-service training program to improve laboratory quality management system oversightSiew Kim Ong0Grant T. Donovan1Nayah Ndefru2Sophanna Song3Chhayheng Leang4Sophat Sek5Michael Noble6Lucy A. Perrone7International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH) CambodiaDepartment of Global Health, Schools of Public Health and Medicine, International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH), University of WashingtonDepartment of Global Health, Schools of Public Health and Medicine, International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH), University of WashingtonInternational Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH) CambodiaInternational Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH) CambodiaInternational Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH) CambodiaDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British ColumbiaDepartment of Global Health, Schools of Public Health and Medicine, International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH), University of WashingtonAbstract Background Laboratory diagnostic testing service delivery and compliance with international standards for laboratory quality are directly influenced by laboratory workforce competency. Many hospital laboratories in constrained resource settings such as Cambodia struggle to cope with the training needs of laboratory professionals in an environment of competing healthcare development priorities. Resource-limited countries need an adaptable and effective approach to provide laboratory professionals with job-specific quality oversight training to ensure the accuracy, timeliness, and reliability of diagnostic services. Case presentation Here, we describe the results of an in-service training and mentoring program conducted with the Cambodia Ministry of Health at 12 tertiary-level hospital laboratories to drive improvements in laboratory quality management systems toward ISO 15189 accreditation, which demonstrated significant progress between baseline and outcome audits in a concurrent study. This case study describes the program, and evaluates how the four primary activities, including actionable gap assessments and planning, centralized and in situ training curriculum, in-person mentoring, and remote tele-mentoring via video communication technologies, contributed towards quality improvement in the participating laboratories. We evaluated participant responses to Likert scale and free response questions from program and training evaluation surveys, and we used thematic analysis to develop a model of best practices within the program’s four primary activities to inform future training approaches. Of these activities, participants agreed most highly that in-person visits and planning based on gap assessments contributed to their learning and ability to improve laboratory operations. Tele-mentoring was rated lowest by participants, who were critical of excessive group dialogue and distraction during web-conferencing; however, feedback suggests both in-person and remote mentoring contribute to continuing education, accountability to action, and peer collaboration and problem solving to improve workforce efforts toward improved quality management systems. Conclusions We recommend here a package of in-service training activities for laboratory quality management system improvement initiatives in resource constrained settings that includes needs-based curricula and personalized action plans for participants; interactive and on-site training workshops; and in-person mentoring, complemented with well managed and regular tele-mentoring that focuses on knowledge retention, accountability to goals, and collaborative problem solving. Our model presents an adaptable approach to human resource development for quality improvement in medical laboratories.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00521-8Laboratory quality management systemsLaboratory in-service trainingTraining methodologyLaboratory mentoringLaboratory tele-mentoring