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Improved care and survival in severe malnutrition through eLearning

Improved care and survival in severe malnutrition through eLearning
Improved care and survival in severe malnutrition through eLearning
Background: scaling up improved management of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) has been identified as the nutrition intervention with the greatest potential to reduce child mortality but it requires improved operational capacity.
Objective: to investigate whether an eLearning course, which can be used at scale in resource-poor countries, leads to improved diagnosis, clinical management and survival of children with SAM.
Design: a 2-year preintervention and postintervention study between January 2015 and February 2017.
Setting: eleven healthcare facilities: nine in Ghana, one in Guatemala, and one in El Salvador.
Intervention: scenario-based eLearning course ‘Caring for infants and young children with severe malnutrition’.
Main outcome measures: identification of children with SAM, quality of care, case-fatality rate.
Methods: medical record reviews of children aged 0–60 months attending eleven hospitals between August 2014 and July 2016, observations in paediatric wards, and interviews with senior hospital personnel.
Results: postintervention there was a significant improvement in the identification of SAM: more children had the requisite anthropometric data (34.9% (1300/3723) vs 15.9% (629/3953)) and more were correctly diagnosed (58.5% (460/786) vs 47.1% (209/444)). Improvements were observed in almost all aspects of the WHO ‘Ten Steps’ of case-management, and case-fatality fell from 5.8% (26/449) to 1.9% (14/745) (Post-pre difference=−3.9%, 95% CI −6.6 to −1.7, p<0.001).
Conclusions: high quality, interactive eLearning can be an effective intervention in scaling up capacity building of health professionals to manage SAM effectively, leading to a reduction in mortality.
severe acute malnutrition, WHO ten steps, capacity building, eLearning
0003-9888
32-39
Choi, Sunhea
1d0e766d-38d5-4d01-aea7-639c4334334f
Yuen, Ho
b1df4c57-0c2a-44ac-ab40-22b88e8effe8
Annan, Reginald
c83b8cdc-5ad7-40d3-9c99-917d95fcf9e6
Monroy-Valle, Michele
32c49d3d-9cc4-4bbb-b1de-8425a8875cf6
Pickup, Trevor M
f7767181-5760-48b8-aaa0-1b3a2c5acb40
Aduku, Nana Esi Linda
18063d37-a57a-4198-8ea7-4f93acce8271
Pulman, Andrew J
ff04044d-ef72-4ccd-8eac-287c3550e1cd
Portillo Sermeño, Carmen Elisa
29fbb472-68e8-45da-ae3b-b71cf2ea03d0
Jackson, Alan
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Ashworth, Ann
328f0423-c375-40bb-8fd5-420b1d5d480f
Choi, Sunhea
1d0e766d-38d5-4d01-aea7-639c4334334f
Yuen, Ho
b1df4c57-0c2a-44ac-ab40-22b88e8effe8
Annan, Reginald
c83b8cdc-5ad7-40d3-9c99-917d95fcf9e6
Monroy-Valle, Michele
32c49d3d-9cc4-4bbb-b1de-8425a8875cf6
Pickup, Trevor M
f7767181-5760-48b8-aaa0-1b3a2c5acb40
Aduku, Nana Esi Linda
18063d37-a57a-4198-8ea7-4f93acce8271
Pulman, Andrew J
ff04044d-ef72-4ccd-8eac-287c3550e1cd
Portillo Sermeño, Carmen Elisa
29fbb472-68e8-45da-ae3b-b71cf2ea03d0
Jackson, Alan
c9a12d7c-b4d6-4c92-820e-890a688379ef
Ashworth, Ann
328f0423-c375-40bb-8fd5-420b1d5d480f

Choi, Sunhea, Yuen, Ho, Annan, Reginald, Monroy-Valle, Michele, Pickup, Trevor M, Aduku, Nana Esi Linda, Pulman, Andrew J, Portillo Sermeño, Carmen Elisa, Jackson, Alan and Ashworth, Ann (2019) Improved care and survival in severe malnutrition through eLearning. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 105 (1), 32-39. (doi:10.1136/archdischild-2018-316539).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: scaling up improved management of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) has been identified as the nutrition intervention with the greatest potential to reduce child mortality but it requires improved operational capacity.
Objective: to investigate whether an eLearning course, which can be used at scale in resource-poor countries, leads to improved diagnosis, clinical management and survival of children with SAM.
Design: a 2-year preintervention and postintervention study between January 2015 and February 2017.
Setting: eleven healthcare facilities: nine in Ghana, one in Guatemala, and one in El Salvador.
Intervention: scenario-based eLearning course ‘Caring for infants and young children with severe malnutrition’.
Main outcome measures: identification of children with SAM, quality of care, case-fatality rate.
Methods: medical record reviews of children aged 0–60 months attending eleven hospitals between August 2014 and July 2016, observations in paediatric wards, and interviews with senior hospital personnel.
Results: postintervention there was a significant improvement in the identification of SAM: more children had the requisite anthropometric data (34.9% (1300/3723) vs 15.9% (629/3953)) and more were correctly diagnosed (58.5% (460/786) vs 47.1% (209/444)). Improvements were observed in almost all aspects of the WHO ‘Ten Steps’ of case-management, and case-fatality fell from 5.8% (26/449) to 1.9% (14/745) (Post-pre difference=−3.9%, 95% CI −6.6 to −1.7, p<0.001).
Conclusions: high quality, interactive eLearning can be an effective intervention in scaling up capacity building of health professionals to manage SAM effectively, leading to a reduction in mortality.

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Accepted/In Press date: 13 July 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 July 2019
Published date: 16 December 2019
Keywords: severe acute malnutrition, WHO ten steps, capacity building, eLearning

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 434223
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434223
ISSN: 0003-9888
PURE UUID: 6c0cfeeb-fa6c-4170-94a5-93d55ef35e41

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Date deposited: 17 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:08

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Contributors

Author: Sunhea Choi
Author: Ho Yuen
Author: Reginald Annan
Author: Michele Monroy-Valle
Author: Trevor M Pickup
Author: Nana Esi Linda Aduku
Author: Andrew J Pulman
Author: Carmen Elisa Portillo Sermeño
Author: Alan Jackson
Author: Ann Ashworth

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