Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.

Due to the dual critical shortages of acute care and healthcare workers in resource-limited settings, many people suffer or die from conditions that could be easily treated if existing resources were used in a more timely and effective manner. In order to address this preventable morbidity and morta...

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Main Authors: Stacey Chamberlain, Uwe Stolz, Bradley Dreifuss, Sara W Nelson, Heather Hammerstedt, Jovita Andinda, Samuel Maling, Mark Bisanzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4388510?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f3521de13ff84a2c97aa4a513150c0c22020-11-25T00:57:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e012255910.1371/journal.pone.0122559Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.Stacey ChamberlainUwe StolzBradley DreifussSara W NelsonHeather HammerstedtJovita AndindaSamuel MalingMark BisanzoDue to the dual critical shortages of acute care and healthcare workers in resource-limited settings, many people suffer or die from conditions that could be easily treated if existing resources were used in a more timely and effective manner. In order to address this preventable morbidity and mortality, a novel emergency midlevel provider training program was developed in rural Uganda. This is the first study that assesses this unique application of a task-shifting model to acute care by evaluating the outcomes of 10,105 patients.Nurses participated in a two-year training program to become midlevel providers called Emergency Care Practitioners at a rural district hospital. This is a retrospective analysis of the Emergency Department's quality assurance database, including three-day follow-up data. Case fatality rates (CFRs) are reported as the percentage of cases with a specific diagnosis that died within three days of their Emergency Department visit.Overall, three-day mortality was 2.0%. The most common diagnoses of patients who died were malaria (n=60), pneumonia (n=51), malnutrition (n=21), and trauma (n=18). Overall and under-five CFRs were as follows: malaria, 2.0% and 1.9%; pneumonia, 5.5% and 4.1%; and trauma, 1.2% and 1.6%. Malnutrition-related fatality (all cases <18 years old) was 6.5% overall and 6.8% for under-fives.This study describes the outcomes of emergency patients treated by midlevel providers in a resource-limited setting. Our fatality rates are lower than previously published regional rates. These findings suggest this model of task-shifting can be successfully applied to acute care in order to address the shortage of emergency care services in similar settings as part of an integrated approach to health systems strengthening.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4388510?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stacey Chamberlain
Uwe Stolz
Bradley Dreifuss
Sara W Nelson
Heather Hammerstedt
Jovita Andinda
Samuel Maling
Mark Bisanzo
spellingShingle Stacey Chamberlain
Uwe Stolz
Bradley Dreifuss
Sara W Nelson
Heather Hammerstedt
Jovita Andinda
Samuel Maling
Mark Bisanzo
Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Stacey Chamberlain
Uwe Stolz
Bradley Dreifuss
Sara W Nelson
Heather Hammerstedt
Jovita Andinda
Samuel Maling
Mark Bisanzo
author_sort Stacey Chamberlain
title Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
title_short Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
title_full Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
title_fullStr Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
title_full_unstemmed Mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural Uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
title_sort mortality related to acute illness and injury in rural uganda: task shifting to improve outcomes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Due to the dual critical shortages of acute care and healthcare workers in resource-limited settings, many people suffer or die from conditions that could be easily treated if existing resources were used in a more timely and effective manner. In order to address this preventable morbidity and mortality, a novel emergency midlevel provider training program was developed in rural Uganda. This is the first study that assesses this unique application of a task-shifting model to acute care by evaluating the outcomes of 10,105 patients.Nurses participated in a two-year training program to become midlevel providers called Emergency Care Practitioners at a rural district hospital. This is a retrospective analysis of the Emergency Department's quality assurance database, including three-day follow-up data. Case fatality rates (CFRs) are reported as the percentage of cases with a specific diagnosis that died within three days of their Emergency Department visit.Overall, three-day mortality was 2.0%. The most common diagnoses of patients who died were malaria (n=60), pneumonia (n=51), malnutrition (n=21), and trauma (n=18). Overall and under-five CFRs were as follows: malaria, 2.0% and 1.9%; pneumonia, 5.5% and 4.1%; and trauma, 1.2% and 1.6%. Malnutrition-related fatality (all cases <18 years old) was 6.5% overall and 6.8% for under-fives.This study describes the outcomes of emergency patients treated by midlevel providers in a resource-limited setting. Our fatality rates are lower than previously published regional rates. These findings suggest this model of task-shifting can be successfully applied to acute care in order to address the shortage of emergency care services in similar settings as part of an integrated approach to health systems strengthening.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4388510?pdf=render
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