The Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus Joint Supportive Supervision Report September 2016
| Id | EPHI-DS0494 |
|---|---|
| Name | The Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus Joint Supportive Supervision Report September 2016 |
| Format | .xlsx |
| Coverage Location | Subnational |
| Coverage Sex | Not applicable |
| Abstract | The Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), with the guidance of the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) and the Pharmaceutical Fund & Supply Agency (PFSA), supported through funding from Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), are implementing Child Survival Program (CSP) to contribute to the national goal of reducing child morbidity and mortality in Ethiopia. This project, beginning in October 2015, focuses on addressing gaps in childhood pneumonia and diarrhea which is a priority for FMOH, by accelerating access to life saving child health commodities (CHC). The program is operational in four agrarian regions of Ethiopia, namely Amhara, Oromia, SNNPRs and Tigray. The program has designed and instituted a Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) framework that is based on the baseline survey findings as benchmark for setting targets. Since the launching of the project, multiple results have gained that ranges from policy translation, national level tools development, child health commodities supply chain system improvement, commodities availability improvement, capacity building training delivery to government staff and monitoring and evaluation activities. A total of 625 health institutions (405 health centers, 34 hospitals and 186 woreda health offices) visited for SS between July 18, 2016 and September 07, 2016. Overall performance from the planned institutions to visit is 98%. The baseline for the same training of pharmacy heads and health facility heads were 13% and 7% respectively. DTC establishment and functionality still remains low, 17%, although there is some improvement from the baseline, 10%. There is low adherence to the new IMNCI guidelines in terms of diarrhea and pneumonia treatment. Sixteen percent of diarrhea cases were not treated with ORS, and 39% of cases were not treated with zinc. Similarly among children seen with pneumonia, 73% were treated with Amoxicillin, while 20% were treated with other antibiotics - mostly cotrimoxazole. Of which Amox DT 250mg treatment was given only for 4% of children with pneumonia cases. This requires expedited rollout of the new IMNCI GL. |
| Additional Material | No |
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| Recommended | Yes |
| Location | |
| Cleaned | Yes |
| Cleaned Format | .xlsx |
| RawFormat | .xlsx |
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| Date Data Collection Started | 2016-07-18 |
| Date Data Collection End | 2016-09-06 |
| Title | The Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia, Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus Joint Supportive Supervision Report September 2016 |
| Data Type | Admin/routine |
| PublicationYear | 2000 |
| SugestedCitation | No |
| OtherIdType | |
| Description | This meta data continues data of joint Supportive Supervision Reported in September 2016 by Clinton Health Access Initiative -Ethiopia on Child Survival Program in Collaboration with PFSA and Regional Health Bureaus This report investigate the progress of LMIS and DTC status after DTC and IPLS training. The result was % of HCs managed Amox DT 250mg within the last 6 month 83.21%, % of HCs has Amox DT 250mg in-stock on day of visit 67.16%, % of HCs has normal stock status (2-4 months of stock) Amox DT 250mg 9.38%, % of HCs managed ORS within the last 6 months, 95.31%, % of HCs has ORS in-stock on day of visit 85.43% after the assessment of the base line assessment. The data was cleaned and available by excel. |
| Dataset study design | Cross-sectional survey |
| Date Data Archived | 2023-08-07 |
| Date Data Cataloged | 2023-08-21 |
| Data Generating Unit | CHAI |
| URL | https://rtds.ephi.gov.et/public/showdetail/494 |
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Open Access
