Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis

Abstract Background Arua district, in Uganda, hosts some of the largest refugee camps in the country. The estimated prevalence of moderate and severe acute malnutrition in children is higher than the national estimates (10.4 and 5.6% respectively, compared to 3.6 and 1.3%). This study aimed at asses...

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Main Authors: Humphrey Wanzira, Richard Muyinda, Peter Lochoro, Giovanni Putoto, Giulia Segafredo, Henry Wamani, Marzia Lazzerini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3366-5
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spelling doaj-c7029afc9fc943b39bd7fb3003cb14b02020-11-25T02:22:46ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632018-07-0118111010.1186/s12913-018-3366-5Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisisHumphrey Wanzira0Richard Muyinda1Peter Lochoro2Giovanni Putoto3Giulia Segafredo4Henry Wamani5Marzia Lazzerini6WHO Collaborating Centre for Maternal and Child Health, Institute for Maternal and Child Health IRCCS Burlo GarofoloDoctors with Africa, CUAMMDoctors with Africa, CUAMMDoctors with Africa, CUAMMDoctors with Africa, CUAMMMakerere University School of Public HealthWHO Collaborating Centre for Maternal and Child Health, Institute for Maternal and Child Health IRCCS Burlo GarofoloAbstract Background Arua district, in Uganda, hosts some of the largest refugee camps in the country. The estimated prevalence of moderate and severe acute malnutrition in children is higher than the national estimates (10.4 and 5.6% respectively, compared to 3.6 and 1.3%). This study aimed at assessing the quality of care provided to children with acute malnutrition at out-patient level in such a setting. Methods Six facilities with the highest number of children with malnutrition were selected. The main tool used was the National Nutrition Service Delivery Assessment Tool, assessing 10 key areas of service delivery and assigned a score as either poor, fair, good or excellent. Health outcomes, quality of case management and data quality were assessed from the health management information system and from the official nutrition registers. Results All facilities except two scored either poor or fair under all the 10 assessment areas. Overall, 33/60 (55%) areas scored as poor, 25/60 (41%) as fair, 2/60 (3.3%) as good, and none as excellent. Main gaps identified included: lack of trained staff; disorganised patient flow; poor case management; stock out of essential supplies including ready-to-use therapeutic foods; weak community linkage. A sample coverage of 45.4% (1020/2248) of total children admitted in the district during the 2016 financial year were included. The overall mean cure rate was 52.9% while the default rate was 38.3%. There was great heterogeneity across health facilities in health outcomes, quality of case management, and data quality. Conclusion This study suggests that quality of care provided to children with malnutrition at health center level is substandard with unacceptable low cure rates. It is essential to identify effective approaches to enhance adherence to national guidelines, provision of essential nutritional commodities, regular monitoring of services and better linkage with the community through village health teams.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3366-5Acute malnutritionChildren under 5 yearsQuality of careQuality assessmentHealth center
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Humphrey Wanzira
Richard Muyinda
Peter Lochoro
Giovanni Putoto
Giulia Segafredo
Henry Wamani
Marzia Lazzerini
spellingShingle Humphrey Wanzira
Richard Muyinda
Peter Lochoro
Giovanni Putoto
Giulia Segafredo
Henry Wamani
Marzia Lazzerini
Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
BMC Health Services Research
Acute malnutrition
Children under 5 years
Quality of care
Quality assessment
Health center
author_facet Humphrey Wanzira
Richard Muyinda
Peter Lochoro
Giovanni Putoto
Giulia Segafredo
Henry Wamani
Marzia Lazzerini
author_sort Humphrey Wanzira
title Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
title_short Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
title_full Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
title_fullStr Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
title_full_unstemmed Quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in Uganda: a cross sectional study in West Nile region during the refugee crisis
title_sort quality of care for children with acute malnutrition at health center level in uganda: a cross sectional study in west nile region during the refugee crisis
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Background Arua district, in Uganda, hosts some of the largest refugee camps in the country. The estimated prevalence of moderate and severe acute malnutrition in children is higher than the national estimates (10.4 and 5.6% respectively, compared to 3.6 and 1.3%). This study aimed at assessing the quality of care provided to children with acute malnutrition at out-patient level in such a setting. Methods Six facilities with the highest number of children with malnutrition were selected. The main tool used was the National Nutrition Service Delivery Assessment Tool, assessing 10 key areas of service delivery and assigned a score as either poor, fair, good or excellent. Health outcomes, quality of case management and data quality were assessed from the health management information system and from the official nutrition registers. Results All facilities except two scored either poor or fair under all the 10 assessment areas. Overall, 33/60 (55%) areas scored as poor, 25/60 (41%) as fair, 2/60 (3.3%) as good, and none as excellent. Main gaps identified included: lack of trained staff; disorganised patient flow; poor case management; stock out of essential supplies including ready-to-use therapeutic foods; weak community linkage. A sample coverage of 45.4% (1020/2248) of total children admitted in the district during the 2016 financial year were included. The overall mean cure rate was 52.9% while the default rate was 38.3%. There was great heterogeneity across health facilities in health outcomes, quality of case management, and data quality. Conclusion This study suggests that quality of care provided to children with malnutrition at health center level is substandard with unacceptable low cure rates. It is essential to identify effective approaches to enhance adherence to national guidelines, provision of essential nutritional commodities, regular monitoring of services and better linkage with the community through village health teams.
topic Acute malnutrition
Children under 5 years
Quality of care
Quality assessment
Health center
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3366-5
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