1. Improving recognition and management of children with complicated severe acute malnutrition at a tertiary referral hospital in Malawi: a quality improvement initiative
- Author
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Emily J Ciccone, Elizabeth Fitzgerald, Heather L. Crouse, Environs (Pachimake), Susan Mhango, Wilfred Gaven, Alexander Kondwani, Temwachi Nyangulu, Binita Patel, and Bryan J. Vonasek
- Subjects
Malawi ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Severe Acute Malnutrition ,Psychological intervention ,Infant ,Nutritional Status ,Anthropometry ,Tertiary referral hospital ,Quality Improvement ,Article ,Tertiary Care Centers ,Child, Preschool ,Intervention (counseling) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucose test ,Child ,business ,PDCA - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) is common in low-income countries such as Malawi and is associated with high mortality in young children. OBJECTIVE: To improve recognition and management of SAM in a tertiary hospital in Malawi. METHODS: The impact of multifaceted quality improvement interventions in multiple process measures pertaining to identification and management of children with SAM using a before-after design was assessed. Interventions included focused training for clinical staff, reporting process measures to clinical staff, and mobile phone-based group messaging for enhanced communication. This initiative focused on children aged 6–36 months admitted to Kamuzu Central Hospital in Malawi from 18 September 2019 to 17 March 2020. Before-after comparisons were made with baseline data from the year prior, and process measures within this intervention period that included three plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles were compared. RESULTS: During the intervention period, 418 children had SAM and in-hospital mortality was 10.8%, which was not significantly different than the baseline period. Compared with the baseline period, there was significant improvement in the documentation of full anthropometrics on admission, blood glucose test within 24 hours of admission and HIV testing results by discharge. During the intervention period, amidst increasing patient census with each PDSA cycle, three process measures were maintained (documentation of full anthropometrics, determination of nutrition status and HIV testing results) and there was significant improvement in blood glucose documentation. CONCLUSIONS: Significant improvement in key quality measures represents early progress towards the larger goal of improving patient outcome, most notably mortality, in children admitted with SAM.
- Published
- 2021
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