Journal ArticleOpen Access
Improving and sustaining quality of child health care through IMCI training and supervision: experience from rural Bangladesh
Author Affiliations
Johns Hopkins University, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
Published InHealth Policy and Planning
Year2013
Citations50
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy includes guidelines for the management of sick children at first-level facilities. These guidelines intend to improve quality of care by ensuring a complete assessment of the child's health and by providing algorithms that combine presenting symptoms into a set of illness classifications for management by IMCI-trained service providers at first-level facilities. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the sustainability of improvements in under-five case management by two cadres of first-level government service providers with different levels of pre-service training following implementation of IMCI training and supportive supervision. METHODS: Twenty first-level health facilities in the rural sub-district of Matlab in Bangladesh were randomly assigned to IMCI intervention or comparison groups. Health workers in IMCI facilities…
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