The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries

Abstract Background Recording and reporting health data in facilities is the backbone of routine health information systems which provide data collected by health facility workers during service provision. Data is firstly collected in a register, to record patient health data and care process, and t...

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Main Authors: Amani Siyam, Por Ir, Dararith York, James Antwi, Freddie Amponsah, Ofelia Rambique, Carlos Funzamo, Aderemi Azeez, Leonard Mboera, Claud John Kumalija, Susan Fred Rumisha, Irene Mremi, Ties Boerma, Kathryn O’Neill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06652-5
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spelling doaj-c2cc3fc95dbd4451898e0f54e57f4c522021-09-19T11:10:10ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632021-09-0121S11910.1186/s12913-021-06652-5The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countriesAmani Siyam0Por Ir1Dararith York2James Antwi3Freddie Amponsah4Ofelia Rambique5Carlos Funzamo6Aderemi Azeez7Leonard Mboera8Claud John Kumalija9Susan Fred Rumisha10Irene Mremi11Ties Boerma12Kathryn O’Neill13Health Workforce Department, World Health OrganizationNational Institute of Public HealthDepartment of Planning and Health Information, Ministry of HealthCentre for Health and Social Policy Research, West End University CollegeGhana Health ServiceNational Institute of HealthWorld Health Organization Country OfficeFederal Ministry of HealthSACIDS Foundation for One Health (SACIDS), Sokoine University of Agriculture (SUA)Health Management Information System (HMIS), Ministry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly and ChildrenThe National Institute for Medical ResearchThe National Institute for Medical ResearchDepartment of Community Health Sciences, Max Rady College of Medicine-University of ManitobaIntegrated Health Services Department, World Health OrganizationAbstract Background Recording and reporting health data in facilities is the backbone of routine health information systems which provide data collected by health facility workers during service provision. Data is firstly collected in a register, to record patient health data and care process, and tallied into nationally designed reporting forms. While there is anecdotal evidence of large numbers of registers and reporting forms for primary health care (PHC) facilities, there are few systematic studies to document this potential burden on health workers. This multi-country study aimed to document the numbers of registers and reporting forms use at the PHC level and to estimate the time it requires for health workers to meet data demands. Methods In Cambodia, Ghana, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania, a desk review was conducted to document registers and reporting forms mandated at the PHC level. In each country, visits to 16 randomly selected public PHC facilities followed to assess the time spent on paper-based recording and reporting. Information was collected through self-reports of estimated time use by health workers, and observation of 1360 provider-patient interactions. Data was primarily collected in outpatient care (OPD), antenatal care (ANC), immunization (EPI), family planning (FP), HIV and Tuberculosis (TB) services. Result Cross-countries, the average number of registers was 34 (ranging between 16 and 48). Of those, 77% were verified in use and each register line had at least 20 cells to be completed per patient. The mean time spent on recording was about one-third the total consultation time for OPD, FP, ANC and EPI services combined. Cross-countries, the average number of monthly reporting forms was 35 (ranging between 19 and 52) of which 78% were verified in use. The estimated time to complete monthly reporting forms was 9 h (ranging between 4 to 15 h) per month per health worker. Conclusions PHC facilities are mandated to use many registers and reporting forms pausing a considerable burden to health workers. Service delivery systems are expected to vary, however an imperative need remains to invest in international standards of facility-based registers and reporting forms, to ensure regular, comparable, quality-driven facility data collection and use.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06652-5Health workerTime motionPublic PHC facilitiesRegistersReporting forms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amani Siyam
Por Ir
Dararith York
James Antwi
Freddie Amponsah
Ofelia Rambique
Carlos Funzamo
Aderemi Azeez
Leonard Mboera
Claud John Kumalija
Susan Fred Rumisha
Irene Mremi
Ties Boerma
Kathryn O’Neill
spellingShingle Amani Siyam
Por Ir
Dararith York
James Antwi
Freddie Amponsah
Ofelia Rambique
Carlos Funzamo
Aderemi Azeez
Leonard Mboera
Claud John Kumalija
Susan Fred Rumisha
Irene Mremi
Ties Boerma
Kathryn O’Neill
The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
BMC Health Services Research
Health worker
Time motion
Public PHC facilities
Registers
Reporting forms
author_facet Amani Siyam
Por Ir
Dararith York
James Antwi
Freddie Amponsah
Ofelia Rambique
Carlos Funzamo
Aderemi Azeez
Leonard Mboera
Claud John Kumalija
Susan Fred Rumisha
Irene Mremi
Ties Boerma
Kathryn O’Neill
author_sort Amani Siyam
title The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
title_short The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
title_full The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
title_fullStr The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
title_full_unstemmed The burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
title_sort burden of recording and reporting health data in primary health care facilities in five low- and lower-middle income countries
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Recording and reporting health data in facilities is the backbone of routine health information systems which provide data collected by health facility workers during service provision. Data is firstly collected in a register, to record patient health data and care process, and tallied into nationally designed reporting forms. While there is anecdotal evidence of large numbers of registers and reporting forms for primary health care (PHC) facilities, there are few systematic studies to document this potential burden on health workers. This multi-country study aimed to document the numbers of registers and reporting forms use at the PHC level and to estimate the time it requires for health workers to meet data demands. Methods In Cambodia, Ghana, Mozambique, Nigeria and Tanzania, a desk review was conducted to document registers and reporting forms mandated at the PHC level. In each country, visits to 16 randomly selected public PHC facilities followed to assess the time spent on paper-based recording and reporting. Information was collected through self-reports of estimated time use by health workers, and observation of 1360 provider-patient interactions. Data was primarily collected in outpatient care (OPD), antenatal care (ANC), immunization (EPI), family planning (FP), HIV and Tuberculosis (TB) services. Result Cross-countries, the average number of registers was 34 (ranging between 16 and 48). Of those, 77% were verified in use and each register line had at least 20 cells to be completed per patient. The mean time spent on recording was about one-third the total consultation time for OPD, FP, ANC and EPI services combined. Cross-countries, the average number of monthly reporting forms was 35 (ranging between 19 and 52) of which 78% were verified in use. The estimated time to complete monthly reporting forms was 9 h (ranging between 4 to 15 h) per month per health worker. Conclusions PHC facilities are mandated to use many registers and reporting forms pausing a considerable burden to health workers. Service delivery systems are expected to vary, however an imperative need remains to invest in international standards of facility-based registers and reporting forms, to ensure regular, comparable, quality-driven facility data collection and use.
topic Health worker
Time motion
Public PHC facilities
Registers
Reporting forms
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06652-5
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