Research

Short-term and sustained effects of a health system strengthening intervention to improve mortality trends for paediatric severe malnutrition in rural South African hospitals: An interrupted time series design

M Muzigaba, G Kigozi, T Puoane

Abstract


Background. Case fatality rates for childhood severe acute malnutrition (SAM) remain high in some resource-limited facilities in South Africa (SA), despite the widespread availability of the World Health Organization treatment guidelines. There is a need to develop reproducible interventions that reinforce the implementation of these guidelines and assess their effect and sustainability.
Objectives. To assess the short-term and sustained effects of a health system strengthening intervention on mortality attributable to SAM in two hospitals located in the Eastern Cape Province of SA.
Methods. This was a theory-driven evaluation conducted in two rural hospitals in SA over a 69-month period (2009 - 2014). In both facilities, a health system strengthening intervention was implemented within the first 32 months, and thereafter discontinued. Sixty-nine monthly data series were collected on: (i) monthly total SAM case fatality rate (CFR); (ii) monthly SAM CFR within 24 hours of admission; and (iii) monthly SAM CFR among HIV-positive cases, to determine the intervention’s effect within the first 32 months and sustainability over the remaining 37 months. The data were analysed using Linden’s method for analysing interrupted time series data.
Results. The study revealed that the intervention was associated with a statistically significant decrease of up to 0.4% in monthly total SAM CFR, a non-statistically significant decrease of up to 0.09% in monthly SAM CFR within 24 hours of admission and a non-statistically significant decrease of up to 0.11% in monthly SAM CFR among HIV-positive cases. The decrease in mortality trends for both outcomes was only slightly reversed upon the discontinuation of the intervention. No autocorrelation was detected in the regression models generated during data analyses.
Conclusion. The study findings suggest that although the intervention was designed to be self-sustaining, this may not have been the case. A qualitative enquiry into the moderating factors responsible for failure to sustain such an intervention, as well as the process of care, would add value to the findings presented in this study.


Authors' affiliations

M Muzigaba, 1) School of Clinical Medicine, College of Health Sciences, University of Kwa-Zulu Natal, Durban South Africa 2) Faculty of Community and Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Bellville, South Africa

G Kigozi, Centre for Health Systems Research & Development, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa

T Puoane,

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Keywords

Severe acute malnutrition, Case fatality rate, Sustainability, Intervention, South Africa, rural hospitals

Cite this article

South African Journal of Child Health 2017;11(1):38-45. DOI:10.7196/SAJCH.2017.v11i1.1201

Article History

Date submitted: 2016-06-13
Date published: 2017-03-31

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