Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement

Introduction: As the management of MDR-TB expands and is decentralised to resource-limited settings, ensuring that patients are managed in line with country guidelines optimises the chances of cure, and minimises transmission and development of further resistance. We aimed to develop sustainable qua...

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Main Authors: Katia Florman, Jonathan Hudson, Marian Loveday
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:Clinical Infection in Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590170220300078
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spelling doaj-1f99a5a5da9645cc8fc4336241d8d2d12020-12-31T04:44:08ZengElsevierClinical Infection in Practice2590-17022020-10-017100020Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvementKatia Florman0Jonathan Hudson1Marian Loveday2St Patrick's Hospital, Hope Street, Bizana 4800, Eastern Cape, South Africa; Corresponding author at: Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, Hampstead NW3 2QG, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.Estcourt Hospital, Old Main Road, Estcourt 3310, South AfricaHealth Systems Research Unit, Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South AfricaIntroduction: As the management of MDR-TB expands and is decentralised to resource-limited settings, ensuring that patients are managed in line with country guidelines optimises the chances of cure, and minimises transmission and development of further resistance. We aimed to develop sustainable quality MDR-TB services in a rural South African district hospital clinic. Methods: Four areas requiring improvement were identified: a poorly trained MDR-TB clinical team, recording of the nutritional status of patients, monitoring patients' response to treatment and drug side-effect monitoring. Changes were implemented over Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles over three months. Interventions included identifying and training nursing staff, creating a body mass index (BMI) measurement area, and introducing drug monitoring guidelines. Results: Improvements were noted across all areas. The number of MDR-TB-trained clinic nurses increased over three months (from 20% to 90%). Increases were also seen in the proportion of patient BMIs recorded (0% to 87%) and of appropriate dietician referrals (0% to 75%). The proportion of smear results available, visual acuity tests and ECGs performed, prior to doctor review, increased over the 3-month period from 0% to 68%, 31% to 94%, and 75% to 89% respectively. Conclusion: Through multidisciplinary collaboration and iterative changes, it was possible to develop a strong clinical team and improve care of MDR-TB patients. Lessons learnt can be applied to similar challenges facing district hospitals caring for complex patients.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590170220300078Multi-drug resistant tuberculosisDecentralisationQuality improvementRural health servicesSouth Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katia Florman
Jonathan Hudson
Marian Loveday
spellingShingle Katia Florman
Jonathan Hudson
Marian Loveday
Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
Clinical Infection in Practice
Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis
Decentralisation
Quality improvement
Rural health services
South Africa
author_facet Katia Florman
Jonathan Hudson
Marian Loveday
author_sort Katia Florman
title Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
title_short Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
title_full Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
title_fullStr Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
title_full_unstemmed Decentralisation of MDR-TB care in rural South Africa: Overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
title_sort decentralisation of mdr-tb care in rural south africa: overcoming the challenges through quality improvement
publisher Elsevier
series Clinical Infection in Practice
issn 2590-1702
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Introduction: As the management of MDR-TB expands and is decentralised to resource-limited settings, ensuring that patients are managed in line with country guidelines optimises the chances of cure, and minimises transmission and development of further resistance. We aimed to develop sustainable quality MDR-TB services in a rural South African district hospital clinic. Methods: Four areas requiring improvement were identified: a poorly trained MDR-TB clinical team, recording of the nutritional status of patients, monitoring patients' response to treatment and drug side-effect monitoring. Changes were implemented over Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles over three months. Interventions included identifying and training nursing staff, creating a body mass index (BMI) measurement area, and introducing drug monitoring guidelines. Results: Improvements were noted across all areas. The number of MDR-TB-trained clinic nurses increased over three months (from 20% to 90%). Increases were also seen in the proportion of patient BMIs recorded (0% to 87%) and of appropriate dietician referrals (0% to 75%). The proportion of smear results available, visual acuity tests and ECGs performed, prior to doctor review, increased over the 3-month period from 0% to 68%, 31% to 94%, and 75% to 89% respectively. Conclusion: Through multidisciplinary collaboration and iterative changes, it was possible to develop a strong clinical team and improve care of MDR-TB patients. Lessons learnt can be applied to similar challenges facing district hospitals caring for complex patients.
topic Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis
Decentralisation
Quality improvement
Rural health services
South Africa
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590170220300078
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