Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries

There is increasing focus on the strength of primary health care systems in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). There are important roles for higher quality district hospital care within these systems. These hospitals are also sources of information of considerable importance to health systems,...

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Príomhchruthaitheoirí: English, M, Mwaniki, P, Julius, T, Chepkirui, M, Gathara, D, Ouma, P, Cherutich, P, Okiro, E, Snow, R
Formáid: Journal article
Teanga:English
Foilsithe / Cruthaithe: BioMed Central 2018
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author English, M
Mwaniki, P
Julius, T
Chepkirui, M
Gathara, D
Ouma, P
Cherutich, P
Okiro, E
Snow, R
author_facet English, M
Mwaniki, P
Julius, T
Chepkirui, M
Gathara, D
Ouma, P
Cherutich, P
Okiro, E
Snow, R
author_sort English, M
collection OXFORD
description There is increasing focus on the strength of primary health care systems in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). There are important roles for higher quality district hospital care within these systems. These hospitals are also sources of information of considerable importance to health systems, but this role, as with the wider roles of district hospitals, has been neglected.As we make efforts to develop higher quality health systems in LMIC we highlight the critical importance of district hospitals focusing here on how data on hospital mortality offers value: i) in understanding disease burden; ii) as part of surveillance and impact monitoring; iii) as an entry point to exploring system failures; and iv) as a lens to examine variability in health system performance and possibly as a measure of health system quality in its own right. However, attention needs paying to improving data quality by addressing reporting gaps and cause of death reporting. Ideally enabling the collection of basic, standardised patient level data might support at least simple case-mix and case-severity adjustment helping us understand variation. Better mortality data could support impact evaluation, benchmarking, exploration of links between health system inputs and outcomes and critical scrutiny of geographic variation in quality and outcomes of care. Improved hospital information is a neglected but broadly valuable public good.Accurate, complete and timely hospital mortality reporting is a key attribute of a functioning health system. It can support countries' efforts to transition to higher quality health systems in LMIC enabling national and local advocacy, accountability and action.
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spelling oxford-uuid:20a1d5ff-189c-4ffc-a363-1eaf6ffc61182022-03-26T11:28:41ZHospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countriesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:20a1d5ff-189c-4ffc-a363-1eaf6ffc6118EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBioMed Central2018English, MMwaniki, PJulius, TChepkirui, MGathara, DOuma, PCherutich, POkiro, ESnow, RThere is increasing focus on the strength of primary health care systems in low and middle-income countries (LMIC). There are important roles for higher quality district hospital care within these systems. These hospitals are also sources of information of considerable importance to health systems, but this role, as with the wider roles of district hospitals, has been neglected.As we make efforts to develop higher quality health systems in LMIC we highlight the critical importance of district hospitals focusing here on how data on hospital mortality offers value: i) in understanding disease burden; ii) as part of surveillance and impact monitoring; iii) as an entry point to exploring system failures; and iv) as a lens to examine variability in health system performance and possibly as a measure of health system quality in its own right. However, attention needs paying to improving data quality by addressing reporting gaps and cause of death reporting. Ideally enabling the collection of basic, standardised patient level data might support at least simple case-mix and case-severity adjustment helping us understand variation. Better mortality data could support impact evaluation, benchmarking, exploration of links between health system inputs and outcomes and critical scrutiny of geographic variation in quality and outcomes of care. Improved hospital information is a neglected but broadly valuable public good.Accurate, complete and timely hospital mortality reporting is a key attribute of a functioning health system. It can support countries' efforts to transition to higher quality health systems in LMIC enabling national and local advocacy, accountability and action.
spellingShingle English, M
Mwaniki, P
Julius, T
Chepkirui, M
Gathara, D
Ouma, P
Cherutich, P
Okiro, E
Snow, R
Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title_full Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title_fullStr Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title_full_unstemmed Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title_short Hospital Mortality – a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
title_sort hospital mortality a neglected but rich source of information supporting the transition to higher quality health systems in low and middle income countries
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