Ethiopia Service Provision Assessment Plus Survey, Health Provider data, 2014
| Id | EPHI-DS0079 |
|---|---|
| Name | Ethiopia Service Provision Assessment Plus Survey, Health Provider data, 2014 |
| Format | .CSV |
| Coverage Location | Selected health facilities from two city administration and nine regions of Ethiopia (National) |
| Coverage Sex | Both |
| Abstract | A facility-based cross-sectional survey was conducted in 1327 health facilities selected from among two city administrations and nine regional administrations of Ethiopia between March and July 2014. The objective of the survey was to provide national and sub-national information on the availability and quality of services delivered by the health facilities. On the other hand, the data were collected using a pretested facility inventory questionnaire by highly trained survey teams. All data entry and editing programs were written using CSPro. The finding of the survey showed that: (1), Among all health facilities excluding health posts, the services the most available are emergency service (97 percent) followed by curative care for sick children, diagnostic or treatment of malaria, and diagnostic or treatment of STIs services (93 percent independently for all). Intensive care unit (ICU) services are available only in 1 percent of all facilities excluding health posts. (2), About seven of ten hospitals and eight of ten health centers offer all basic services. (3), Overall, 87 percent of all facilities offer ANC services and six of every ten ANC facilities provide PMTCT services. (4) Nine of ten facilities that offer normal delivery services reported that they have a provider of delivery care available on-site or on-call 24 hours a day and vaginal delivery was the most frequent signal function carried out (83 percent) in almost all hospitals and health centers. (5), Among the facilities that have an HIV testing system, all had the capacity to test for HIV on the day of the survey (i.e., the facility had an HIV rapid test kit, ELISA testing capacity, or other HIV testing capacity on the day of the survey). (6), Services for all neglected tropical disease (NTDs) are more likely available in hospitals compared with other facility types, and Government facilities are more likely to provide these services compared with other managing authorities and (7), Among facilities that offer malaria diagnosis and/or treatment services, only one-third (34 percent) and less than half health posts (45 percent) had guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of malaria available in the facility. In conclusion, most of the facilities are equipped with the necessary equipment that allows them to provide primary health care and have essential commodity supplies and drugs. However, the survey identified that there is a major gap that requires immediate remedy in order to improve the quality of health care service delivery. |
| Additional Material | No |
| Keywords |
|
| Recommended | Yes |
| Location | |
| Cleaned | Yes |
| Cleaned Format | . csdb |
| RawFormat | . csdb |
| Comment | |
| Remark | |
| Note | |
| Treatment | |
| Date Data Collection Started | 2014-03-10 |
| Date Data Collection End | 2014-07-25 |
| Title | Ethiopia Service Provision Assessment Plus Survey, 2014 |
| Data Type | Survey |
| PublicationYear | 2014 |
| SugestedCitation | Ethiopia Service Provision. Assessment Plus (ESPA+) Survey. 2014. Ethiopian Public Health Institute. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Federal Ministry of Health. (website:www.ephi.gov.et |
| OtherIdType | |
| Description | This dataset is generated by an Ethiopia Service Provision Assessment Plus Survey conducted in all regional states and two city administrations of Ethiopia in 2014 based on health facilities by the Ethiopia Public Health Institute and Ministry of Health. The dataset captures information collected from a sample of health service providers on their qualifications (training, experience, and continuing education), supervision they had received, and their perceptions of the service delivery environment. The data was collected by highly trained survey teams using a modified Health worker interview questionnaire to include a set of service-specific “knowledge” questions based on World Bank’s SDI clinical knowledge assessment modules, to assess individual health providers’ knowledge in managing common health conditions. A total of 6,125 health care providers were interviewed, mainly from government-managed health facilities (87 percent) most often in health centers (44 percent) and in health posts (33 percent) made frequently of diploma nurses (34 percent) and health extension workers (30 percent). |
| Dataset study design | Longitudinal |
| Date Data Archived | 2019-09-30 |
| Date Data Cataloged | 2020-05-18 |
| Data Generating Unit | Health System and Reproductive Health |
| URL | https://rtds.ephi.gov.et/public/showdetail/79 |
| Tags |
|
Open Access
