Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
To Document Pneumonia Case Management Practices in Selected Communities in Pakistan; A Qualitative Study
Pneumonia in Pakistan continues to be the leading killer of children under five. Although various national and provincial programs have tried to tackle this but they have not been able to achieve the desired outcomes. Additionally, there has been limited in depth evaluation of the practices of pneumonia management at various levels of the community. The investigators, therefore, aim to establish an understanding of pneumonia case management at three levels of healthcare - community, first level care facility and practitioner level. This will be conducted through observations of pneumonia case managements practices of healthcare providers at these three levels across the country by simulated patients. Observation checklists will be developed incorporating settings and behaviors. Observation sites will be randomly selected with 32 observations made in each province. The results of this study will yield the ground reality of pneumonia case management in Pakistan. Based on the results of this study, strategies can be devised to improve case management within the community with models of regular monitoring and supervision.
Despite the availability of standard pneumonia management guidelines and multiple global
efforts, pneumonia continues to be the leading killer of children under five, accounting to
around 17% of the total under five deaths globally. It has been estimated that annually there
are around 120 million episodes of pneumonia among children with around 14 million
progressing to severe episodes. Out of these cases, close to 1.3 million children die with
81% of these deaths occurring in children under 2 years of age. Fifty two percent of these
deaths occur in the Sub-Saharan region and South Asia with main contributions from India,
Nigeria, Congo, Pakistan and Afghanistan. In Pakistan, pneumonia contributes to 16% of
under-five mortality in the country having a well-defined yet poorly functional healthcare
system.
Healthcare in Pakistan is provided through two sectors; public and private. The public sector
includes community health workers, referred to as Lady Health Workers (LHWs) working under
the National Program for Family planning and Primary Health Care. It also includes the First
Level Care Facilities referred to as Basic Health Units (BHUs) and Rural Health Centres
(RHCs) and district/tertiary care hospitals. The private sector includes the private clinic
and private hospitals. The public sector provides healthcare free of cost or with minimal
charges whereas the private sector is expensive as patients spend out-of-pocket for health
service in this sector. This accounts to the wide difference of quality of care across both
the sectors as the public sector is not funded adequately by the government to provide high
quality services, due to only 2% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) assigned to healthcare.
Irrespective of the public and private sector, case management of pneumonia in children under
five is supposed to be followed uniformly across all sectors as training of the healthcare
providers is standard across all cadres of care under various programs in the country.
Despite that fact, the mortality and morbidity rate due to pneumonia in children under five
remains unchanged in the country.
World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund
(UNICEF) have developed multiple action/ intervention plans to curb pneumonia related
morbidity and mortality in children under five and based on those plans Pakistan has launched
multiple national programs. These programs include the National Acute Respiratory Illness
(ARI) control program which was launched in 1989 with the main objectives of reducing
severity and mortality due to pneumonia and rationalize the use of antimicrobials and other
drugs for treatment of ARI. It was supported by WHO, UNICEF and United States Agency for
International Development (USAID). While the program was ongoing, in 1990, in a National
workshop on policy related research action plan, organized by the Ministry of Health, the
Ministry of Planning and Development and the Aga Khan University (AKU), ARI was ranked sixth
of fifteen priority areas for national policy-linked research. The National ARI Control
program continued but WHO soon realized that this disease centric narrow approach has not
been able to achieve its desired objectives. Therefore, it developed a more integrated
approach and launched it globally as Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI)
launched in Pakistan in 1998. The approach in IMCI focused on improving case management
skills of health workers, strengthening the health system, and addressing family and
community practices. Concerns were raised that this is yet another attempt to launch a child
health intervention vertically. Duplicity was very much evident from the fact that ARI
existed as an independent program and was also part of the IMCI package. Between 2004-2010, a
USAID funded project called The Pakistan Initiative for Mothers and Newborns (PAIMAN) was
undertaken which focused on improving the status of maternal and newborn health in 10
districts (19% of the national population), which later expanded to 24 districts across the
four provinces and Azad Jammu and Kashmir in Pakistan. ARI was an important component in that
project. The national Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health program (MNCH) was then launched in
2010 funded mainly by Development for International Development (DFID) implemented in 36
districts and ended after 5 years. It was focused on strengthening of management and
organization mechanism of healthcare delivery systems. Under all these programs, selected
health care professionals, both community and facility based, were trained on WHO standard of
ARI case management. Looking at the unchanged mortality statistics, there is a concern that
these trainings might have failed to change the case management practices within the
community. It is perhaps due to the fact that the monitoring and evaluation was not a strong
point of these programs.
There is limited data within Pakistan which reflects the status of the quality of current
pneumonia case management practices throughout the three tiered health system (primary health
facilities, secondary care hospitals, and tertiary care hospitals) as well as the private
sector. There are a number of approaches which can be used to assess standard case management
including recall based patient surveys, questionnaire surveys of knowledge,
prescription/chart analysis and use of disguised patients to assess actual practice. A
disguised patient is one who although suffers from a particular disease but acts as a
disguised observer. Considering the use of disguised patients provides an actual picture of
practice, therefore, it has been used extensively most recently. This process provides an
assessment of the practitioners' knowledge of appropriate care and the actual care delivered,
i.e., adherence to standard treatment guidelines. Such an approach in Pakistan can identify
current pneumonia case management practices across the country because to-date no such study
has been conducted in this field. The results of this study can help in informing design of
future policies and interventions that can in turn assist in reducing pneumonia related
morbidity and mortality.
Methodology:
This will be a qualitative study which will be conducted through participant observations
over a period of 13 months across randomly selected sites in four provinces of Pakistan in
addition to the federal capital. The provinces are Baluchistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhuwah (KPK),
Punjab and Sindh.
After obtaining ethical clearance, an observation tool will be developed based on standard
WHO guidelines and input from field experts. This tool will be pretested upon finalization.
At the same time an advisory committee will also be formulated composed of expert
pediatricians and public health professionals who will provide their input into the
implementation protocol and the tool. Once the tool is finalized training will be conducted
on the tool and then observations will be conducted.
Observation Sites:
Observations sites will be randomly selected from each of the four provinces and the capital
through our specialized sampling software. Upon site selection, observations will be made
across the following levels of healthcare: community level, first level care facility (FLCF)
and practitioner level both in the public and private sector. The community level
observations will include observation of the pneumonia case management by the Lady Health
Workers (LHWs). LHWs are the primary care givers at the community level who cover around 60%
of Pakistan. Their basic duties include education, counseling and basic management of the
common maternal and child ailments. Each LHW covers around 100-120 household and visits each
household once a month. The observations will be made either at the health house of the LHW
or she will be requested to visit the household of the disguised patient.
The FLCF level will include observations made at the primary health care facilities which are
the Basic Health Units (BHUs) and Rural Health Centres (RHCs). A basic health unit is located
within a union council which is the smallest administrative unit in the Pakistani
administrative system. Each basic health unit covers a catchment area of 25,000 households.
Pakistan has around 5,290 Basic Health Units (BHUs) although not all are functional. Services
provided at BHU are promotive, preventive, curative and referral. LHWs refer patients usually
to BHUs. RHCs provide in-patient service as compared to BHUs. They usually have 10-20 beds
and cover a catchment area of 100,000 people. The RHC provides promotive, preventive,
curative, diagnostics and referral services apart from the in-patient services. It also
provides clinical, logistical and managerial support to the BHUs, LHWs, and dispensaries that
fall within its geographical limits. RHC also provides medico-legal, basic surgical, dental
and ambulance services. There are around 552 RHCs in Pakistan.
The practitioner level observations will include those of practitioners at both the private
and public sector. The public sector will include observations made in outpatient departments
of selected tertiary care hospitals across the study sites. Observations made at the private
practitioner level will include selected solitary private clinics or clinics within private
hospitals. The community and FLCF level will represent practices within the rural community
and the practitioner level will represent practices within the semi urban/urban communities.
Data Collectors:
A team of data collectors, who will be healthcare professionals, will be trained on
appropriate administration of the observation tool upon recruitment. The training will also
include an introduction to pneumonia, its signs and symptoms, diagnosis and management
according to WHO guidelines. A 3 day interactive training workshop will be conducted whereby
mock excesses will also be conducted. A total of three training will be conducted whereby
data collectors from Islamabad (capital), Punjab and KPK will have one training as their
participants can be managed to be brought in one location due to close proximity. Sindh and
Baluchistan participants will have two separate trainings.
Recruitment of Patients' Caregiver and Conduction of Observations:
Each data collector will be provided a pre-defined list of addresses whereby the observations
will be made. He/she will go to the location and will search the nearby community for cases
of pneumonia in children under five. Once the cases have been identified, their caregivers
will be sought. These caregivers are the primary individuals providing direct care to the
child. Usually, these are the mothers, fathers, grandmothers or guardians of the child. They
will explained the purpose of the study and will be requested to participate in the study to
accompany the data collector who will be disguised as a relative/friend of the caregiver, to
the health facilities and upon agreement will sign a consent form. This means that they will
disguise as an acquaintance of the data collector who will take them to the healthcare
professional to be observed. They will take the ill child along, give the history of that
child to the healthcare professional and answer any relevant questions which will be asked by
him/her and get the child examined and treated. In the meantime, the data collector will make
the relevant observations based on the observation tool which will be filled after the visit.
The data collector will not reveal that he/she is a healthcare professional. Additionally,
the data collector will also take an audio recorder along to record the entire conversation
which will help in filling up the observation tool later and also validate the visit. Once
the visit is completed, the data collector will take the caregiver back to their premises and
fill up the observation tool in tablets within one hour of the visit. Electronic Case
Recruitment Forms (eCRFs) will be used for improved data quality, avoidance of manual data
entry errors and confidentiality etc.
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