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Development of paediatric quality of inpatient care indicators for low-income countries - A Delphi study

Abstract:

Background: Indicators of quality of care for children in hospitals in low-income countries have been proposed, but information on their perceived validity and acceptability is lacking.

Methods: Potential indicators representing structural and process aspects of care for six common conditions were selected from existing, largely qualitative WHO assessment tools and guidelines. We employed the Delphi technique, which combines expert opinion and existing scientific information, to assess their perceived validity and acceptability. Panels of experts, one representing an international panel and one a national (Kenyan) panel, were asked to rate the indicators over 3 rounds and 2 rounds respectively according to a variety of attributes.

Results: Based on a pre-specified consensus criteria most of the indicators presented to the experts were accepted: 112/137(82%) and 94/133(71%) for the international and local panels respectively. For the other indicators there was no consensus; none were rejected. Most indicators were rated highly on link to outcomes, reliability, relevance, actionability and priority but rated more poorly on feasibility of data collection under routine conditions. There was moderate to substantial agreement between the two panels of experts.

Conclusions: This Delphi study provided evidence for the perceived usefulness of most of a set of measures of quality of hospital care for children proposed for use in low-income countries. However, both international and local experts expressed concerns that data for many process-based indicators may not currently be available. The feasibility of widespread quality assessment and responsiveness of indicators to intervention should be examined as part of continued efforts to improve approaches to informative hospital quality assessment.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1186/1471-2431-10-90

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Publisher:
BioMed Central
Journal:
BMC Pediatrics More from this journal
Volume:
10
Article number:
90
Publication date:
2010-12-14
Acceptance date:
2010-12-14
DOI:
EISSN:
1471-2431


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
190815
UUID:
uuid:09b421dd-b66c-4240-bcdf-767469548659
Local pid:
pubs:190815
Source identifiers:
190815
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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