Joint Supportive Supervision Report by the Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus (fourth Round supportive supervision), 2018
| Id | EPHI-DS0273 |
|---|---|
| Name | Joint Supportive Supervision Report by the Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus (fourth Round supportive supervision), 2018 |
| Format | . SAV |
| Coverage Location | |
| Coverage Sex | Both |
| Abstract | This cross-sectional survey was conducted in 1198 health facilities selected from Ethiopia between December 2017 to January 2018. The objective of this report was to carry out a monitoring and evaluation exercise on the implementation of the child survival program project. The result of this report revealed that overall performance from the planned institutions to visit was 97% achievement. In addition, the following major findings were identified by the SS teams. 80% and 65% of pharmacy heads and health facility heads were trained on the Drug and Therapeutics Committee (DTC), respectively. The SS revealed that there is a significant improvement in IPLS/LMIS implementation and availability of CHCs compared with the baseline. In terms of commodity availability, 90%, 98%, and 96% of HCs had Amox DT 250mg, ORS, and Zinc, respectively, on the day of the visit. Numerous HCs were not using Amox DT for Intra facility consumption. The application of IPLS formats for CHCs was found to be limited. There was low adherence to the new IMNCI guidelines in terms of diarrhea and pneumonia treatment. About 88% of diarrhea cases were treated with ORS and Zinc. Similarly, among children seen with pneumonia, 90% were treated with any Amoxicillin, but the prescription of Amox is still low (29%). The busy schedule of Woreda health offices with different activities to provide feedback directly to woreda/facility heads (for the debriefing of the SS findings) and multiple governmental meetings to conduct the SS based on arranged schedules were among some of the challenges faced during the SS. |
| Additional Material | No |
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| Recommended | Yes |
| Location | |
| Cleaned | Yes |
| Cleaned Format | . csdb |
| RawFormat | . csdb |
| Comment | |
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| Date Data Collection Started | 2017-12-30 |
| Date Data Collection End | 2018-01-30 |
| Title | Joint Supportive Supervision Report by the Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus (fourth Round supportive supervision), 2018 |
| Data Type | Survey |
| PublicationYear | 2018 |
| SugestedCitation | no |
| OtherIdType | |
| Description | The 2018 fourth round joint supportive supervision report by the Clinton health access initiative -Ethiopia, child survival program in collaboration with PFSA and regional health bureaus dataset is produced by an institution-based survey among 1198 health facilities from four agrarian regions of regional government partners (PFSA), Regional Health Bureau (RHB), Zonal Health Department (ZHD) and Woreda Health Office (WoHO) staff members) had carried out the first SS visit at project sites (Health Centers, Hospitals, Woreda Health Offices, health posts) conducted between December 2017 to January 2018. The dataset captures information on the performance of the planned institutions, assessing the logistic level of woreda health office, technical support, level of training on Drug and Therapeutics Committee (DTC) among pharmacy heads and health facility heads, improvement in IPLS/LMIS implementation and availability of CHCs availability, the adherence to the new IMNCI guidelines in terms of diarrhea and pneumonia treatment, the capacity of woreda health office logistic officers were assessed. Generally, the objective of these visits was:
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| Dataset study design | Longitudinal |
| Date Data Archived | 2021-05-22 |
| Date Data Cataloged | 2021-06-22 |
| Data Generating Unit | NGO |
| URL | https://rtds.ephi.gov.et/public/showdetail/273 |
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Open Access
