AI Article Synopsis

  • Objective of the study was to evaluate the views and practices of healthcare workers on hospital discharge and follow-up care for young children in Kenya's Migori and Homa Bay regions.
  • The study utilized surveys and interviews from healthcare workers at eight hospitals, revealing that while many recognized the importance of discharge tasks, most felt their hospitals lacked adequate resources and training to support effective care.
  • A significant finding was that healthcare workers underestimated the risk of post-discharge mortality in children, highlighting the need for improved training, tracking systems, and support mechanisms for follow-up care.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess attitudes, perceptions, and practices of healthcare workers regarding hospital discharge and follow-up care for children under age five in Migori and Homa Bay, Kenya.

Methods: This mixed-methods study included surveys and semi-structured telephone interviews with healthcare workers delivering inpatient pediatric care at eight hospitals between November 2017 and December 2018.

Results: The survey was completed by 111 (85%) eligible HCWs. Ninety-seven of the surveyed HCWs were invited for interviews and 39 (40%) participated. Discharge tasks were reported to be "very important" to patient outcomes by over 80% of respondents, but only 37 (33%) perceived their hospital to deliver this care "very well" and 23 (21%) believed their facility provides sufficient resources for its provision. The vast majority (97%) of participants underestimated the risk of pediatric post-discharge mortality. Inadequate training, understaffing, stock-outs of take-home therapeutics, and user fees were commonly reported health systems barriers to adequate discharge care while poverty was seen as limiting caregiver adherence to discharge and follow-up care. Respondents endorsed the importance of follow-up care, but reported supportive mechanisms to be lacking. They requested enhanced guidelines on discharge and follow-up care.

Conclusion: Kenyan healthcare workers substantially underestimated the risk of pediatric post-discharge mortality. Pre- and in-service training should incorporate instruction on discharge and follow-up care. Improved post-discharge deaths tracking-e.g., through vital registry systems, child mortality surveillance studies, and community health worker feedback loops-is needed, alongside dissemination which could leverage platforms such as routine hospital-based mortality reports. Finally, further interventional trials are needed to assess the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of novel packages to improve discharge and follow-up care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8064546PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0249569PLOS

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