NIGERIA. AIDS Prevention Initiative in Nigeria (APIN) Capacity Building for the Quality Management Programme. AIDS Prevention Initiative Nigeria

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NIGERIA AIDS Prevention Initiative in Nigeria (APIN) Capacity Building for the Quality Management Programme

Human Development Profile of Nigeria and HIV/AIDS Population Population growth Infant mortality 150 million 2.8% (NS) 72/1000 birth ( ) HIV prevalence 4.6% (2008) GDP per capita Growth rate Debt burden $260 ( ) 3.5% ( ) $28.5 billion

Where we are now (1) No. of PLWIH 2.98 m HCT coverage 14% PMTCT coverage 11% Annual HIV+ Births 70,000 New infections 336,379/year Number requiring ART 857,455 Number on ART 450,000 Annual AIDS Deaths 192,000 Cumulative AIDS Deaths 2.99m Total orphaned by AIDS 2.17 m

Where we are now (2) HIV Prevalence Trend HIV Prevalence (%) 7 6 5.8 5.4 5 5 4.5 4.4 4.6 4 3.8 HIV Prev. 3 2 1.8 1 0 Y-1991 Y-1993 Y-1995 Y-1999 Y-2001 Y-2003 Y-2005 Y-2008 Year

Burden of Care and Support 4 million infected, 1 million with symptoms Experts project $500-675 million for comprehensive prevention and care $194 million for limited scaling up of prevention $144 million for limited scaling up of Antiretroviral treatment Nigeria needs to spend between 30-40% of health budget to cope

HIV/AIDS Financial Sources in 2007 and 2008

APIN Quality Management Programme

Introduction History APIN was established as a program of HSPH in 2000 with a grant from the Gates Foundation The Harvard PEPFAR(APIN Plus) Program 2004 APIN LLC was incorporated as a local NGO in 2007 to gradually assume HSPH s work in Nigeria.

Two tiered structure Governance HRSA s recommendations on governance New board Composition More diversified board Meeting transition guidelines (85 % Nigerians) Broadened scope of activities E.g. Resource mobilization for sustainability

APIN/PEPFAR Sites: 2010 Federal Medical Centre Nguru University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital State Specialist Hospital Maiduguri Nursing Home Maiduguri Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital University of Ibadan College of Medicine 3 Satellites under UCH Adeoyo Maternity Hospital 43 Oyo DOTS Centres Jos University Teaching Hospital Our Lady of Apostles Hospital Jos 13 Satellite Hospitals, 44 PHCs Sacred Heart Catholic Hospital Lantoro 68 Nigerian Military Hospital Creek Hospital Nigerian Institute for Medical Research University of Lagos, College of Medicine PHC-Iru Victoria Island Lagos University Teaching Hospital Mushin General Hospital Onikan Women s Hospital Federal Medical Centre Makurdi University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital Widowcare Abakiliki Ebonyi Sites Under APIN Ltd Sites Under Harvard PEPFAR APIN Program Office

Adult numbers as at December 2010 Service Total Harvard APIN PMTCT CT and results Tested Positive ART Cumulative Current CARE Cumulative Current 66,503 3,119 94,478 57,996 129,797 63,128 46,783 2,348 56,935 39,187 80,661 48,752 19,720 771 27,543 18,809 49,136 24,376 HCT CT and results 101,430 73,249 28,181

Pediatrics numbers as at December 2010 Service Total Harvard APIN ART Cumulative Current 3,988 2,998 2,578 1,945 1,410 1,053 CARE Cumulative Current 6,089 3,898 3,867 2,565 2,222 1,333 HCT CT and Results 7,981 5,077 2,904

QM Programme Background Goal: Ensure programme sites to provide the best possible quality of care to HIV positive patients using evidence based methods. Objectives: To assess quality of care provided to HIV/AIDS patients and promote accountability for patient care To evaluate health outcomes of patients as related to clinical processes To promote joint identification of strengths and weaknesses in clinical processes and systems To constantly improve upon the quality of care delivered to patients by applying Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) tools.

QM Programme Background (2) Model Evidence Based Practice+ Continuous Quality Improvement Evidence based practice: treatment and care protocols in line with national and international guidelines Continuous Quality Improvement: QI Infrastructure + Performance Measurement+ Quality Improvement Activities

History and Evolution John Snow International (JSI) QA visits Commissioned by HSPH in 2006 to assess the quality of care at some sites as part of its oversight functions. Assessed the adult and pediatrics programme areas 2 rounds of visits to 5 sites Internal Quality Improvement Efforts: To provide on-going support to sites in identified areas of weakness, share strengths across sites and continuously monitor quality of care. Started in 2007 with adult ART programme and expanded to include PMTCT and pediatrics ART in 2009. Quality of care was evaluated during scheduled site assessment visits using a combination of methodologies including chart reviews and staff interviews.

History and Evolution (2) Internal Quality Improvement Efforts contd: Chart review was done by entering data into a file maker based site assessment database that allowed for rapid data analysis and immediate feedback. Follow up action included trainings, programme area specific technical assistance and follow up assessment visits Collaboration with Federal Government of Nigeria The Nigerian government piloted a national QI system with support from HIVQUAL in 2007 and 2008 APIN/Harvard PEPFAR was actively involved in all the processes including indicator development, training, site visits and debrief meetings 4 of our sites participated in the 1 st and 2 nd pilot phases APIN was actively involved in the development of national QI indicators- January 2010

History and Evolution (3) Harmonization of APIN QA indicators with the Federal Ministry of Health HIV Quality of care indicators To prevent double reporting and increased work load on the sites Included all indicators not on the original APIN list and adopted the Federal Government indicators in areas of overlap. Original APIN QA indicators (Vial Load assessment and outcome monitoring) not part of the Federal Government list were retained. The harmonized indicators now serve as the minimum indicator set to be reported against every 6 months Engagement with HEALTHQUAL (September 2010) Engaged by Harvard Clinical Oversight Committee to support APIN QI efforts

APIN Quality Management Structure Programme management level: 2 Quality Assurance staff: QA Coordinator and QA officer Central QA Committee: provides strategic direction to APIN s QI efforts Site (health facility) level Quality improvement committee: led by QI focal person who is usually a clinician Has terms of Reference adopted from the central office generic document Initiates on- site performance measurement, quality gaps analysis and improvement projects to address identified gaps Reports to the head of the ART programme on site and the central office through the QA Coordinator

Approach to Capacity Building Trainings Regular assessment using the site QM programme status check list Tools development Coaching

Trainings Basic Quality Improvement Training Target audience: All Site QI committee members Purpose: provide introduction to QI concepts and methodologies Intermediate QI training/review meeting Target audience: Site QI focal persons Purpose: Provide additional training to on Continuous Quality Improvement tools Allow for periodic review of QM programme and peer learning Regional trainings Uses basic QI training curriculum Aims to increase the pool of health care workers with QI skills and competencies APIN/HealthQual TOT To provide participants a solid understanding of quality improvement (QI) theory and methodologies To increase the pool of qualified quality improvement trainers to further build site specific and zonal capacity for quality improvement

Regular assessment using the site QM programme status check list Purpose: Help programme office to understand the state and functionality of sites QM programme so that the most appropriate form of support in the different thematic areas can be provided. Thematic Areas Quality Improvement Infrastructure Quality Management Plans Internal Performance Measurement Quality Improvement Activities Administered in 2009 and 2010

Tools Development Results from the 2009 administration of the status check list revealed that processes were not uniform across sites with resultant inability to compare results or share best practices. Tools developed to harmonize processes and enable demonstration of improvement and processes APIN QI Tool Kit How-to document Step wise approach to quality improvement Contains both narratives and tools for each step QI Committee: Generic TOR, meeting records template, agenda template Quality Management Plan: Template Quality Improvement activities: steps and tools Prioritization matrix, flow charts, tools for root cause analysis, improvement matrix, implementation plan template.

QA Report Generation Tools Quality Indicators (QuIC) tool: Automated, file maker based utility. Has replaced manual report generation for adult indicators, reduce reporting burden and turn around time. Increases reliability and accuracy of QA reports Can be run at the smallest clinics Displays individual IDs of patients meeting certain criteria in addition to generating percentages- helps with individual patient follow up and care Quality Improvement indicators SOP Stepwise instructions on generating QA indicators manually ( in use for pediatrics and PMTCT)

Innovation in Implementation Existing electronic utilities assist the sites to generate outcome data for patients on care and treatment. Harvard and APIN site networking allows for best practices to be readily adopted. E.g. Dedicated space or hours for pharmacy pickups Verification of patient contact info at each visit Inter-site training and assessment activities

Patient Monitoring and Management Tools Treatment Response Utility Patient info Pharmacy Pickups Laboratory Values Each green triangle indicates one pickup of antiretroviral medications. Orange triangles indicate a change in regimen. CD4 Log of Viral Load

Quality Improvement Coaching Purpose Serve as a bridge between didactic trainings and real life practice. Tailored to the needs of individual sites and sometimes individual members of the QA project specific teams Eligibility for coaching based upon scores from QM output assessment Measures 5 domains QI Reporting, QM plan, QI committee structure, QI committee functionality and performance measurement Maximum score is 20 Score bands 0-5, 6-10 qualify for coaching

Results 2 dimensions of results: QM system building: changes in site QM programme status check list parameters Improving quality of care indicators: selected indicators between July 2009 and December 2010

QI Status Checklist Findings Quality Improvement Infrastructure December 2009 September 2010 Existing Committee 100% 100% Representative membership 74% 83% Agenda Prior to QI team meetings 26% 53% Appropriate content of agenda 33% 44% QI Committee Terms of reference 22% 80% Keeping meeting records 26% 53% * Short term QA work plan 13% 60% Evidence of work plan implementation 33% 27% Work plan implementation on track 33% 40% Additional 2010 indicator ++Tangible meeting outputs NA 19%

QI Status Checklist Findings (2) Quality Improvement Infrastructure Dec 2009 Sept2010 Internal Performance Measurement activity 39% 43% Appropriate indicators 44% 69% Evidence based choice of measurement area Quality Improvement Activities 44% 69% Past or current Quality improvement activities 22% 40% Appropriate activities 40% 58% Implementation tracking 0% 17% Documentation of implementation 0% 17% ++Prioritization Matrix NA 92% ++Root cause Analysis NA 58% ++Improvement Matrix NA 50% ++Process Indicators NA 0%

Summary 2009: most sites were at comparable levels in understanding and implementation of QI, so a general approach could be employed: central training, QI tool kit etc 2010: sites are at different levels of implementation and understanding, hence a case by case approach is needed in 2011 QI committee strengthening Support for QI processes at different levels Support to develop QM plan

Changes in Quality of Care Indicators

Challenges Burden of work: quantity and type of work Work load of site staff especially with respect to other primary responsibilities in the hospital impact on ability to meet and carry out QI activities QI requires a different set of skills, most of which health care workers do not receive as part of pre-service training Funding for QI at Health Facility level Basic needs like stationery, refreshments Programme careful not to create a special QI budget Calls for 100% QI staff at Health Facilities Concerns that it might undermine the team approach to QI Documentation Absence of a strong National QI programme

Fitting into a National QM programme Treatment and care protocols in line with national guidelines Already using national QI indicators and reporting timelines Documented systems and processes that allow for comparison, sharing of best practices and alignments when necessary Pool of master trainers and coaches available who can support the national programme in its scale up

Thank You!