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"Mebratie, Anagaw"
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Routine data in a primary care performance dashboard, Ethiopia
by
Arsenault, Catherine
,
Kassahun Gelaw, Solomon
,
Derseh Mebratie, Anagaw
in
Antibiotics
,
Antiretroviral agents
,
Antiretroviral drugs
2024
To explore the feasibility of building a primary care performance dashboard using DHIS2 data from Ethiopia's largest urban (Addis Ababa), agrarian (Oromia) and pastoral (Somali) regions.
We extracted 26 data elements reported by 12 062 health facilities to DHIS2 for the period 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2023. Focusing on indicators of effectiveness, safety and user experience, we built 14 indicators of primary care performance covering reproductive, maternal and child health, human immunodeficiency virus, tuberculosis, noncommunicable disease care and antibiotic prescription. We assessed data completeness by calculating the proportion of facilities reporting each month, and examined the presence of extreme outliers and assessed external validity.
At the regional level, average completeness across all data elements was highest in Addis Ababa (82.9%), followed by Oromia (66.2%) and Somali (52.6%). Private clinics across regions had low completeness, ranging from 38.6% in Somali to 58.7% in Addis Ababa. We found only a few outliers (334 of 816 578 observations) and noted that external validity was high for 11 of 14 indicators of primary care performance. However, the 12-month antiretroviral treatment retention rate and proportions of patients with controlled diabetes or hypertension exhibited poor external validity.
The Ethiopian DHIS2 contains information for measuring primary care performance, using simple analytical methods, at national and regional levels and by facility type. Despite remaining data quality issues, the health management information system is an important data source for generating health system performance assessment measures on a national scale.
Journal Article
Dropping out of Ethiopia’s community-based health insurance scheme
by
Mebratie, Anagaw D
,
Alemu, Getnet
,
Yilma, Zelalem
in
Affordability
,
Community health care
,
Community Participation
2015
Low contract renewal rates have been identified as one of the challenges facing the development of community-based health insurance (CBHI) schemes. This article uses longitudinal household survey data gathered in 2012 and 2013 to examine dropout in the case of Ethiopia’s pilot CBHI scheme. We treat dropout as a function of scheme affordability, health status, scheme understanding and quality of care. The scheme saw enrolment increase from 41 % 1 year after inception to 48 % a year later. An impressive 82 % of those who enrolled in the first year renewed their subscriptions, while 25 % who had not enrolled joined the scheme. The analysis shows that socioeconomic status, a greater understanding of health insurance and experience with and knowledge of the CBHI scheme are associated with lower dropout rates. While there are concerns about the quality of care and the treatment meted out to the insured by providers, the overall picture is that returns from the scheme are overwhelmingly positive. For the bulk of households, premiums do not seem to be onerous, basic understanding of health insurance is high and almost all those who are currently enrolled signalled their desire to renew contracts.
以社区为基础的医疗保险 (CBHI) 计划面临的一大挑战就是 低合同续签率。本文采用 2012 年和 2013 年收集的家庭跟踪 数据来检查埃塞俄比亚以社区为基础的医疗保险试点计划的 退出情况。我们将退出视为经济承受力、健康状况、对计划 的理解程度和服务质量的一个函数。计划实施后参与人数从 第一年的 41% 增加到一年后的 48%。引人注目的是,在第一 年订购的人中 82% 选择了续订,没有订购的人中有 25% 选 择了加入到计划中。分析显示,社会经济状况、对医疗保险 的更深入理解和对 CBHI 的了解与体验都与低退出率相关。 尽管对于服务的质量和给被保险人提供的治疗有质疑的声 音,总的来说这项计划的结果还是非常乐观的。对于大多数 家庭来说,保险费并不繁重,人们对医疗保险有很高的基本 理解,并且参与的人中几乎全部都表达了想要续订的意愿。
Las bajas tasas de renovación de los contratos se han identificado como uno de los desafíos que enfrenta el desarrollo de los planes de seguros de salud basados en la comunidad (SSBC). Este artículo utiliza datos longitudinales de encuestas de hogares recogidos en 2012 y 2013 para examinar la deserción en el caso del esquema piloto del SSBC de Etiopía. Tratamos la deserción como una función de la asequibilidad del esquema, el estado de salud, la comprensión del esquema y la calidad de la atención. El esquema vio el aumento de la inscripción desde el 41% 1 año después de su inicio hasta el 48% un año después. Un impresionante 82% de las personas que se inscribieron en el primer año renovaron sus suscripciones, mientras que 25% de aquellos que no se había inscrito se unió al esquema. El análisis muestra que el estado socioeconómico, una mayor comprensión de los seguros de salud y la experiencia y el conocimiento del esquema de SSBC se asocian con tasas de deserción inferiores. Si bien existen dudas acerca de la calidad de la atención y el trato dado a los asegurados por los proveedores, el panorama general es que los rendimientos del esquema son abrumadoramente positivos. Para la mayor parte de los hogares, las primas no parecen ser onerosas, la comprensión básica del seguro de salud es alta y casi todos aquellos que están inscritos actualmente señalaron su deseo de renovar los contratos.
Journal Article
Antenatal care quality and detection of risk among pregnant women: An observational study in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa
by
Mugenya, Irene
,
Mfeka-Nkabinde, Nompumelelo Gloria
,
Taddele, Tefera
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Anemia
2024
Antenatal care (ANC) is an essential platform to improve maternal and newborn health (MNH). While several articles have described the content of ANC in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), few have investigated the quality of detection and management of pregnancy risk factors during ANC. It remains unclear whether women with pregnancy risk factors receive targeted management and additional ANC.
This observational study uses baseline data from the MNH eCohort study conducted in 8 sites in Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and South Africa from April 2023 to January 2024. A total of 4,068 pregnant women seeking ANC for the first time in their pregnancy were surveyed. We built country-specific ANC completeness indices that measured provision of 16 to 22 recommended clinical actions in 5 domains: physical examinations, diagnostic tests, history taking and screening, counselling, and treatment and prevention. We investigated whether women with pregnancy risks tended to receive higher quality care and we assessed the quality of detection and management of 7 concurrent illnesses and pregnancy risk factors (anemia, undernutrition, obesity, chronic illnesses, depression, prior obstetric complications, and danger signs). ANC completeness ranged from 43% in Ethiopia, 66% in Kenya, 73% in India, and 76% in South Africa, with large gaps in history taking, screening, and counselling. Most women in Ethiopia, Kenya, and South Africa initiated ANC in second or third trimesters. We used country-specific multivariable mixed-effects linear regression models to investigate factors associated with ANC completeness. Models included individual demographics, health status, presence of risk factors, health facility characteristics, and fixed effects for the study site. We found that some facility characteristics (staffing, patient volume, structural readiness) were associated with variation in ANC completeness. In contrast, pregnancy risk factors were only associated with a 1.7 percentage points increase in ANC completeness (95% confidence interval 0.3, 3.0, p-value 0.014) in Kenya only. Poor self-reported health was associated with higher ANC completeness in India and South Africa and with lower ANC completeness in Ethiopia. Some concurrent illnesses and risk factors were overlooked during the ANC visit. Between 0% and 6% of undernourished women were prescribed food supplementation and only 1% to 3% of women with depression were referred to a mental health provider or prescribed antidepressants. Only 36% to 73% of women who had previously experienced an obstetric complication (a miscarriage, preterm birth, stillbirth, or newborn death) discussed their obstetric history with the provider during the first ANC visit. Although we aimed to validate self-reported information on health status and content of care with data from health cards, our findings may be affected by recall or other information biases.
In this study, we observed gaps in adherence to ANC standards, particularly for women in need of specialized management. Strategies to maximize the potential health benefits of ANC should target women at risk of poor pregnancy outcomes and improve early initiation of ANC in the first trimester.
Journal Article
Catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure in Ethiopia: evidence from the Ethiopia socioeconomic survey
by
Tadiwos, Yamlak Bereket
,
Mebratie, Anagaw Derseh
,
Kassahun, Meseret Molla
in
Catastrophic health expenditure
,
Expenditures
,
Health
2025
Background
Out-of-pocket payment remains one of the ways to finance health care in Ethiopia accounting 31%. These out-of-pocket health expense leads citizens’ face catastrophic and impoverishing expenditure. The most recent survey-based study of catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure was done from the 2015/16 consumption and expenditure survey with finding of 2.1% and 1% respectively.
Objective
To assess catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure and the determinant factors of catastrophic health expenditure in Ethiopia, 2023 from the 2018/19 socioeconomic survey.
Methodology
A secondary data from Ethiopian socioeconomic survey 2018/19 conducted by Ethiopia’s Central Statistical Agency and World Bank was used to assess the catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure at the national and subnational level by the Wagstaff and Van Doorslaer and Xu et al. methodology. Then binary logistic regression was computed by the STATA (ver.12) software to assess the determinant factors of catastrophic health expenditure.
Result
From 6770 households 1.49% and 0.89% of them in Ethiopia faced catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure respectively at 10% threshold level and households having a member with more facility visit had increased likelihood of facing catastrophic health expenditure (AOR = 2.45, 95%CI; 1.6—3.8) and also having member being hospitalized in the household had increased odds of facing catastrophic health expenditure (Adjusted odds ratio, AOR = 1.9, 95% confidence interval, CI; 1.19- 3.16). On the contrary, there is a decreased likelihood of facing catastrophic health expenditure among those who were insured for health (AOR = 0.58, 95%CI; 0.35- 0.97) and was in the richest consumption quintile group (AOR = 0.6, 95%CI; 0.47- 0.65).
Conclusion and recommendation
The finding indicates that there are still notable households facing catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure in Ethiopia especially in the lower consumption quintiles indicating inequity. In addition it is found that those with health insurance coverage, lower hospitalization and health service utilization had lower chance of facing catastrophic health payment. So it is suggested that activities that reduce hospitalization rate, increase insurance coverage and addressing the poor must be in place so that the catastrophic health cost incurred can be lowered at national level.
Journal Article
The Effect of Ethiopia’s Community-Based Health Insurance Scheme on Revenues and Quality of Care
by
Alemu, Getnet
,
Bedi, Arjun S.
,
Shigute, Zemzem
in
Community-Based Health Insurance - economics
,
Community-Based Health Insurance - standards
,
Ethiopia
2020
Ethiopia’s Community-Based Health Insurance (CBHI) scheme was established with the objectives of enhancing access to health care, reducing out-of-pocket expenditure (OOP), mobilizing financial resources and enhancing the quality of health care. Previous analyses have shown that the scheme has enhanced health care access and led to reductions in OOP. This paper examines the impact of the scheme on health facility revenues and quality of care. This paper relies on a difference-in-differences approach applied to both panel and cross-section data. We find that CBHI-affiliated facilities experience a 111% increase in annual outpatient visits and annual revenues increase by 47%. Increased revenues are used to ameliorate drug shortages. These increases have translated into enhanced patient satisfaction. Patient satisfaction increased by 11 percentage points. Despite the increase in patient volume, there is no discernible increase in waiting time to see medical professionals. These results and the relatively high levels of CBHI enrollment suggest that the Ethiopian CBHI has been able to successfully negotiate the main stumbling block—that is, the poor quality of care—which has plagued similar CBHI schemes in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal Article
Using an Interactive Voice Response Survey to Assess Patient Satisfaction in Ethiopia: Development and Feasibility Study
2025
Patient satisfaction surveys can offer crucial information on the quality of care but are rarely conducted in low-income settings. In contrast with in-person exit interviews, phone-based interactive voice response (IVR) surveys may offer benefits including standardization, patient privacy, reduced social desirability bias, and cost and time efficiency. IVR surveys have rarely been tested in low-income settings, particularly for patient satisfaction surveys.
In this study, we tested the feasibility of using an IVR system to assess patient satisfaction with primary care services in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. We described the methodology, response rates, and survey costs and identified factors associated with survey participation, completion, and duration.
Patients were recruited in person from 18 public and private health facilities in Addis Ababa. Patients' sex, age, education, reasons for seeking care, and mobile phone numbers were collected. The survey included 15 questions that respondents answered using their phone keypad. We used a Heckman probit regression model to identify factors influencing the likelihood of IVR survey participation (picking up and answering at least 1 question) and completion (answering all survey questions) and a Weibull regression model to identify factors influencing the survey completion time.
A total of 3403 individuals were approached across 18 health facilities. Nearly all eligible patients approached (2985/3167, 94.3%) had a functioning mobile phone, and 89.9% (2415/2685) of those eligible agreed to be enrolled in the study. Overall, 92.6% (2236/2415) picked up the call, 65.6% (1584/2415) answered at least 1 survey question, and 42.9% (1037/2415) completed the full survey. The average survey completion time was 8.1 (SD 1.7) minutes for 15 Likert-scale questions. We found that those aged 40-49 years and those aged 50+ years were substantially less likely to participate in (odds ratio 0.63, 95% CI 0.53-0.74) and complete the IVR survey (odds ratio 0.77, 95% CI 0.65-0.90) compared to those aged 18-30 years. Higher education levels were also strongly associated with survey participation and completion. In adjusted models, those enrolled in private facilities were less likely to participate and complete the survey compared to those in public health centers. Being male, younger, speaking Amharic, using a private hospital, and being called after 8 PM were associated with a shorter survey duration. The average survey costs were US $7.90 per completed survey.
Our findings reveal that an IVR survey is a feasible, low-cost, and rapid solution to assess patient satisfaction in an urban context in Ethiopia. However, survey implementation must be carefully planned and tailored to local challenges. Governments and health facilities should consider IVR to routinely collect patient satisfaction data to inform quality improvement strategies.
Journal Article
Containing the spread of COVID-19 in Ethiopia
by
Alemu, Getnet
,
Bedi, Arjun
,
Shigute, Zemzem
in
Coronavirus Infections - epidemiology
,
Coronavirus Infections - prevention & control
,
Coronaviruses
2020
International travel – isolation of passengers arriving from international destinations and suspension of flights, Quarantine – more than 16 000 people have been placed in quarantine for 14 days with 27 universities serving as quarantine center, Spread of World Health Organization recommended practices – such as frequent hand washing, avoiding handshakes, elbow sneezing and coughing through mass media, Free provisions – toll free telephone lines for information and free provision of sanitary items such as soap and hand-washing gels to targeted groups in Addis Ababa, Closures – of schools, universities, bars and nightclubs; suspending public gatherings and meetings and issuing stay-at-home orders for all but necessary staff, Subsidized – internet and voice package offered by Ethio telecom, Mass disinfection – of critical urban locations, Avoiding overcrowding – by reducing the maximum number of passengers in trains, taxis and buses to half their capacity, Complete transport lockdown – in some regions of the country except for carriage of essential supplies, Release of prisoners – release of around 4,000 pr,isoners who committed minor offences and/or were to be soon released Postponed – perhaps most notably, national elections scheduled for August 2020 have been postponed. The social distancing measures in rural areas relate to agricultural marketing, avoidance of social gatherings while at the same time continuing daily agricultural tasks such as belg (autumn) crop season plantation. The government’s health care team has been working with Chinese health care experts to enhance the capacity and expertise of its health care system. While access to health care has sharply increased in the last ten years and a substantial number of households are covered by a community-based health insurance scheme introduced in 2011, resources are limited.
Journal Article
Receipt of core antenatal care components and associated factors in Ethiopia: a multilevel analysis
2024
Despite recent promising progress, maternal morbidity and mortality are still unacceptably high in Ethiopia. This is partly attributed to the lack of quality health services. Pregnant women may not receive adequate services that are essential to protect the health of women and their unborn children. This study aimed to examine the extent of receiving prenatal care components and associated factors in Ethiopia. It also assessed prenatal service use inequality between urban and rural residents.
The analysis was carried out using the 2016 Ethiopian Demographic and Health Survey (EDHS), which is nationally representative survey data. A weighted sample of 4,772 women nested within 595 communities who had live births five years preceding the survey was included in the study. Necessary adjustments were made to account for the design of the survey, and sampling weights were used to adjust for nonproportional allocation of the sample to strata. Bivariate and multivariable multilevel ordered logit models were used to analyze factors associated with receiving comprehensive ANC contents. Statistically significant predictors were identified at
value ≤ 0.05.
Among those women who had at least one ANC visit, only 15% (95% CI: 13, 16) received six core elements of antenatal care. The proportion of mothers who had essential prenatal components in rural areas was less than 13 percentage points. Approximately 43% of women did not receive at least two doses of tetanus toxoid vaccines to protect them and newborn infants against this life-threatening disease. Moreover, the majority of them, particularly those in rural Ethiopia, were not informed about pregnancy danger signs. Mothers who had at least four ANC visits received more types of prenatal components compared to those who had fewer ANC visits. The multilevel regression analysis revealed that receiving adequate ANC content is positively associated with having more frequent ANC visits, attaining a higher education level, being a member of a household in the highest wealth quintile and residing in urban areas.
The evidence implies that the quality of maternal health services needs to be improved. Health programs and interventions should also give priority to rural areas where the majority of Ethiopian women reside.
Journal Article
Use of healthcare services during the COVID-19 pandemic in urban Ethiopia: evidence from retrospective health facility survey data
2022
ObjectivesIn recent years, Ethiopia has made enormous strides in enhancing access to healthcare, especially, maternal and child healthcare. With the onset and spread of COVID-19, the attention of the healthcare system has pivoted to handling the disease, potentially at the cost of other healthcare needs. This paper explores whether this shift has come at the cost of non-Covid related healthcare, especially the use of maternal and child health (MCH) services.SettingData covering a 24-month period are drawn from 59 health centres and 29 public hospitals located in urban Ethiopia.Primary and secondary outcomes measuresThe primary outcome measures are the use of MCH services including family planning, antenatal and postnatal care, abortion care, delivery and immunisation. The secondary outcome measures are the use of health services by adults including antiretroviral therapy (ART), tuberculosis (TB) and leprosy and dental servicesResultsThere is a sharp reduction in the use of both inpatient (20%–27%, p<0.001) and outpatient (27%–34%, p<0.001) care, particularly in Addis Ababa, which has been most acutely affected by the virus. This decline does not come at the cost of MCH services. The use of several MCH components (skilled birth attendant deliveries, immunisation, postnatal care) remains unaffected throughout the period while others (family planning services, antenatal care) experience a decline (8%–17%) in the immediate aftermath but recover soon after.ConclusionConcerns about the crowding out of MCH services due to the focus on COVID-19 are unfounded. Proactive measures taken by the government and healthcare facilities to ring-fence the use of essential healthcare services have mitigated service disruptions. The results underline the resilience and agility displayed by one of the world’s most resource-constrained healthcare systems. Further research on the approaches used to mitigate disruptions is needed.
Journal Article
The maternal and newborn health eCohort to track longitudinal care quality: study protocol and survey development
by
Tiruneh Tiyare, Firew
,
Mthethwa, Londiwe
,
Mugenya, Irene
in
Adult
,
Clinical outcomes
,
Competence
2024
The MNH eCohort was developed to fill gaps in maternal and newborn health (MNH) care quality measurement. In this paper, we describe the survey development process, recruitment strategy, data collection procedures, survey content and plans for analysis of the data generated by the study. We also compare the survey content to that of existing multi-country tools on MNH care quality. The eCohort is a longitudinal mixed-mode (in-person and phone) survey that will recruit women in health facilities at their first antenatal care (ANC) visit. Women will be followed via phone survey until 10-12 weeks postpartum. User-reported information will be complemented with data from physical health assessments at baseline and endline, extraction from MNH cards, and a brief facility survey. The final MNH eCohort instrument is centered around six key domains of high-quality health systems including competent care (content of ANC, delivery, and postnatal care for the mother and newborn), competent systems (prevention and detection, timely care, continuity, integration), user experience, health outcomes, confidence in the health system, and economic outcomes. The eCohort combines the maternal and newborn experience and, due to its longitudinal nature, will allow for quality assessment according to specific risks that evolve throughout the pregnancy and postpartum period. Detailed information on medical and obstetric history and current health status of respondents and newborns will allow us to determine whether women and newborns at risk are receiving needed care. The MNH eCohort will answer novel questions to guide health system improvements and to fill data gaps in implementing countries.
Journal Article