Mengistu B., Karim A.M., Eniyew A., Yitabrek A., Eniyew A., Tsegaye S., Muluye F., Tesfaye H., Demeke B., Marsh D.R.
Save the Children, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; The Last Ten Kilometer Project, JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc., Ethiopia; Le Monde Health and Development Consultancy, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Save the Children, Ha- wassa, Ethiopia; Save the Children, Amherst, United States
Mengistu, B., Save the Children, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Karim, A.M., The Last Ten Kilometer Project, JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc., Ethiopia; Eniyew, A., Le Monde Health and Development Consultancy, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Yitabrek, A., Save the Children, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Eniyew, A., Le Monde Health and Development Consultancy, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Tsegaye, S., Save the Children, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Muluye, F., Le Monde Health and Development Consultancy, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Tesfaye, H., Save the Children, Ha- wassa, Ethiopia; Demeke, B., Save the Children, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Marsh, D.R., Save the Children, Amherst, United States
Background: The Performance Review and Clinical Mentoring Meeting (PRCMM) is an approach to improve and sustain Health Extension Worker (HEW) skills and performance in integrated Community Case Management (iCCM). Objective: To compare HEW performance in recording case management before and after they participated in PRCMM. Methods: We conducted a historical cohort analysis of iCCM case records between September 2010 and Decem-ber 2012 from 622 randomly selected health posts representing 31 intervention woredas (districts) of Amhara, Oromia and Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples' Regions. We used longitudinal regression analysis comparing the trend in the consistency of the classification with the assessment, treatment and follow-up date as well as caseload in the periods before and after PRCMM, with 5511 and 7901 case records, respectively. Results: Overall consistency improved after PRCMM for all common classifications as follows: Pneumonia (54.1% [95% CI: 47.7°/60.5%] vs. 78.2% [73.9%-82.5%]), malaria (50.8% [42.9%-58.7%] vs. 78.9% [73.4%- 84.4%]), and diarrhea (33.7% [27.9%-39.5%] vs. 70.0% [64.7%-75.3%]). This improvement was consistently observed comparing the six months before and the six months after PRCMM in all the common classifications except for malaria where the improvement observed during the first three post-PRCMM months disappeared during the fifth and sixth months. Caseload increased significantly after PRCMM (6.6 [95% CI: 5.9-7.3] vs. 9.2 [8.5-9.9] cases/health post/month). Conclusion: PRCMM seemed to improve iCCM performance of HEWs and should be integrated within the PIIC system and given about eveiy six months, at least at first, to sustain improvement.
case management; child health care; clinical competence; community care; documentation; education; health auxiliary; human; infant; newborn; preschool child; standards; teacher; Case Management; Child Health Services; Child, Preschool; Clinical Competence; Community Health Services; Community Health Workers; Documentation; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Mentors