Strengthening district health teams capacity in surveillance systems and response to public health threats in Western Uganda through field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP)
Date
2020-05-07
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Science Research Publishing
Abstract
To strengthen the District Capacity in surveillance for effective detection, Reporting and Response to Public Health threats. Background: The
overall aim of a good surveillance system is to strengthen the capacity of a
Health system through training of health personnel who can conduct effective surveillance activities. A good surveillance system is achieved through
improved use of complete and timely health information to detect changes
in time to institute a rapid response to the suspected outbreak of Public
Health events. This assessment followed a 3-month Field Epidemiology
Training program undertaken by the investigator who applied the acquired
knowledge and skills in completion of the assessment. Study Design: It was a
descriptive cross-sectional, institutional based epidemiological investigation
conducted at district level and Health Centre 1V in Kabarole from 15th December 2019-March 2020. eReports were retrieved from DHIS-2 for epidemiological weeks 44 in 2019 to week 3 in 2020. Data analysis: Micro soft word
excel program was used to determine the reporting rates, epidemic disease
trends and construction of malaria channel. SWOT analysis was done to
identify poor HMIS reporting as the lead surveillance quality challenge and
route cause analysis done to determine underlying causes. Results: Weekly
reports analyzed were from a total of 53 Health facilities and one Health Centre four for malaria channel construction. Of the 53 functional Health facilities assessed in the district, the average reporting Timeliness was 32% and
Completeness at 63% from week 44 in 2019 to week 3 in 2020. This finding
shows that the district was not achieving the 80% Timeliness and 80% Completeness national target. The poor reporting situation implies that the district may not detect an emerging Public Health Event and respond in time. Poor
reporting rate was linked to knowledge gap among reporting staff in completion of the newly revised HMIS tools and lack of support supervision. The
analyzed data revealed that the district had increased dysentery, measles and
typhoid fever cases. The dysentery and typhoid fever cases had reached and
surpassed the Alert and Action thresh hold levels however there was no reported death from these diseases. Further inquiry revealed that Typhoid fever
was being diagnosed using WIDAL test as opposed to WHO recommendation of stool or blood culture. The noted typhoid fever outbreak in the district
was therefore being based on wrong laboratory tests hence regarded by the
researcher as speculative. Findings on malaria channel revealed a normal and
expected trend of malaria in Kabarole district in 2020. Conclusion: knowledge and skills from FETP-training enabled the investigator to establish the
fact that the district’s surveillance system was less sensitive in detecting Public
Health events for a quick response. Intensified targeted support supervision
and mentorships of all health workers on reporting could help improve the
districts surveillance system.
Description
Keywords
HMIS timeliness and completeness, Surveillance systems, Field epidemiology, Malaria chanel