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Citation

Simmons, Elizabeth M.; Singh, Kavita; Mpiima, Jamiru; Kumar, Manish; & Weiss, William (2020). Assessing Coverage of Essential Maternal and Child Health Interventions Using Health-Facility Data in Uganda. Population Health Metrics, 18(1), 26. PMCID: PMC7547522

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nationally representative household surveys are the gold standard for tracking progress in coverage of life-saving maternal and child interventions, but often do not provide timely information on coverage at the local and health facility level. Electronic routine health information system (RHIS) data could help provide this information, but there are currently concerns about data quality. This analysis seeks to improve the usability of and confidence in electronic RHIS data by using adjustments to calculate more accurate numerators and denominators for essential interventions.
METHODS: Data from three sources (Ugandan Demographic and Health (UDHS) survey, electronic RHIS, and census) were used to provide estimates of essential maternal (> 4 antenatal care visits (ANC), skilled delivery, and postnatal care visit (PNC)) and child health interventions (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, and hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenzae type b and polio vaccination series, measles vaccination, and vitamin A). Electronic RHIS data was checked for quality and both numerators and denominators were adjusted to improve accuracy. Estimates were compared between the three sources.
RESULTS: Estimates of maternal health interventions from adjusted electronic RHIS data were lower than those of the UDHS, while child intervention estimates were typically higher. Adjustment of electronic RHIS data generally improved accuracy compared with no adjustment. There was considerable agreement between estimates from adjusted, electronic RHIS data, and UDHS for skilled delivery and first dose of childhood vaccination series, but lesser agreement for ANC visits and second and third doses of childhood vaccinations.
CONCLUSIONS: Nationally representative household surveys will likely continue being the gold standard of coverage estimates of maternal and child health interventions, but this analysis shows that current approaches to adjusting health facility estimate works better for some indications than others. Further efforts to improve accuracy of estimates from RHIS sources are needed.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12963-020-00236-x

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2020

Journal Title

Population Health Metrics

Author(s)

Simmons, Elizabeth M.
Singh, Kavita
Mpiima, Jamiru
Kumar, Manish
Weiss, William

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC7547522

Data Set/Study

Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS)

Continent/Country

Uganda

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Singh, K - 0000-0001-8670-2262
Kumar - 0000-0002-2207-329X
Simmons, E - 0000-0003-0780-467X