Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda

Abstract Background Neonatal mortality contributes to nearly half of child deaths globally and the majority of these deaths are preventable. Poor quality of care is a major driver of neonatal mortality in low- and middle-income countries. The All Babies Count (ABC) intervention was designed to reduc...

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Main Authors: David Tuyisenge, Samuel Byiringiro, M. Louise Manirakiza, Robert G. Mutsinzi, Alphonse Nshimyiryo, Merab Nyishime, Lisa R. Hirschhorn, Francois Biziyaremye, Joseph Gitera, Kathryn Beck, Catherine M. Kirk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02544-z
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spelling doaj-8d65f1d6632044ad900ff69a64bf8df72021-02-21T12:15:46ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312021-02-0121111010.1186/s12887-021-02544-zQuality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural RwandaDavid Tuyisenge0Samuel Byiringiro1M. Louise Manirakiza2Robert G. Mutsinzi3Alphonse Nshimyiryo4Merab Nyishime5Lisa R. Hirschhorn6Francois Biziyaremye7Joseph Gitera8Kathryn Beck9Catherine M. Kirk10Partners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaFeinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern UniversityPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaRwandan Ministry of HealthPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaPartners In Health/Inshuti Mu BuzimaAbstract Background Neonatal mortality contributes to nearly half of child deaths globally and the majority of these deaths are preventable. Poor quality of care is a major driver of neonatal mortality in low- and middle-income countries. The All Babies Count (ABC) intervention was designed to reduce neonatal mortality through provision of equipment and supplies, training, mentorship, and data-driven quality improvement (QI) with peer-to-peer learning through learning collaborative sessions (LCS). We aim to describe the ABC scale-up in seven rural district hospitals from 2017 to 2019 focusing on the QI strategies implemented in hospital neonatal care units (NCUs) and the resultant neonatal care outcomes. Methods A pre-post quasi experimental study was conducted in 7 rural hospitals in Rwanda in two phases. The baseline periods were April-June 2017 for Phase I and July-September 2017 for Phase II; with end-line data collected during the same periods in 2019. Data included facility audits of supplies and staffing, LCS surveys of QI skills, and reports of implemented QI change ideas. Data on NCU admissions and deaths were extracted from Health Management Information System (HMIS). Facility-reported change ideas were coded into common themes. Changes in post-post neonatal mortality were measured using Chi-squared tests. Results NCUs were run by a median of 1 nurse [interquartile range (IQR):1–2] at baseline and endline. Median NCU admissions increased from 121 [IQR: 77–155] to 137 [IQR: 79–184]. Availability of advanced equipment improved (syringe pumps: 57–100 %, vital sign monitors: 51–100 % and CPAP machine: 14–100 %). There were significant improvements in QI skills among NCU staff. All 7 NCUs (100 %) addressed non-adherence to protocol as a priority gap, 5 NCUs (86 %) also improved communication with families. NCU case fatality rate declined from 12.4 to 7.8 % (p = 0.001). Conclusions The ABC package of interventions combining the provision of essential equipment to NCU, clinical training and strong mentorship, QI coaching, and the LCS approach for peer-to-peer learning was associated with significant neonatal mortality reduction and services utilization in the intervention hospitals.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02544-zQuality improvementNeonatal careNeonatologyLearning collaborativesQuality of care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Tuyisenge
Samuel Byiringiro
M. Louise Manirakiza
Robert G. Mutsinzi
Alphonse Nshimyiryo
Merab Nyishime
Lisa R. Hirschhorn
Francois Biziyaremye
Joseph Gitera
Kathryn Beck
Catherine M. Kirk
spellingShingle David Tuyisenge
Samuel Byiringiro
M. Louise Manirakiza
Robert G. Mutsinzi
Alphonse Nshimyiryo
Merab Nyishime
Lisa R. Hirschhorn
Francois Biziyaremye
Joseph Gitera
Kathryn Beck
Catherine M. Kirk
Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
BMC Pediatrics
Quality improvement
Neonatal care
Neonatology
Learning collaboratives
Quality of care
author_facet David Tuyisenge
Samuel Byiringiro
M. Louise Manirakiza
Robert G. Mutsinzi
Alphonse Nshimyiryo
Merab Nyishime
Lisa R. Hirschhorn
Francois Biziyaremye
Joseph Gitera
Kathryn Beck
Catherine M. Kirk
author_sort David Tuyisenge
title Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
title_short Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
title_full Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
title_fullStr Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across All Babies Count supported hospitals in rural Rwanda
title_sort quality improvement strategies to improve inpatient management of small and sick newborns across all babies count supported hospitals in rural rwanda
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Neonatal mortality contributes to nearly half of child deaths globally and the majority of these deaths are preventable. Poor quality of care is a major driver of neonatal mortality in low- and middle-income countries. The All Babies Count (ABC) intervention was designed to reduce neonatal mortality through provision of equipment and supplies, training, mentorship, and data-driven quality improvement (QI) with peer-to-peer learning through learning collaborative sessions (LCS). We aim to describe the ABC scale-up in seven rural district hospitals from 2017 to 2019 focusing on the QI strategies implemented in hospital neonatal care units (NCUs) and the resultant neonatal care outcomes. Methods A pre-post quasi experimental study was conducted in 7 rural hospitals in Rwanda in two phases. The baseline periods were April-June 2017 for Phase I and July-September 2017 for Phase II; with end-line data collected during the same periods in 2019. Data included facility audits of supplies and staffing, LCS surveys of QI skills, and reports of implemented QI change ideas. Data on NCU admissions and deaths were extracted from Health Management Information System (HMIS). Facility-reported change ideas were coded into common themes. Changes in post-post neonatal mortality were measured using Chi-squared tests. Results NCUs were run by a median of 1 nurse [interquartile range (IQR):1–2] at baseline and endline. Median NCU admissions increased from 121 [IQR: 77–155] to 137 [IQR: 79–184]. Availability of advanced equipment improved (syringe pumps: 57–100 %, vital sign monitors: 51–100 % and CPAP machine: 14–100 %). There were significant improvements in QI skills among NCU staff. All 7 NCUs (100 %) addressed non-adherence to protocol as a priority gap, 5 NCUs (86 %) also improved communication with families. NCU case fatality rate declined from 12.4 to 7.8 % (p = 0.001). Conclusions The ABC package of interventions combining the provision of essential equipment to NCU, clinical training and strong mentorship, QI coaching, and the LCS approach for peer-to-peer learning was associated with significant neonatal mortality reduction and services utilization in the intervention hospitals.
topic Quality improvement
Neonatal care
Neonatology
Learning collaboratives
Quality of care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-021-02544-z
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