1 / 24

MESH Mentoring and Enhanced Supervision as a QI strategy at Health Centers

MESH Mentoring and Enhanced Supervision as a QI strategy at Health Centers. Challenges in Health Center Nurse Training and Supervision. Misalignment of nurse training and their clinical responsibilities Limited supervision:

kael
Télécharger la présentation

MESH Mentoring and Enhanced Supervision as a QI strategy at Health Centers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MESHMentoring and Enhanced Supervision as a QI strategy at Health Centers

  2. Challenges in Health Center Nurse Training and Supervision • Misalignment of nurse training and their clinical responsibilities • Limited supervision: • Infrequent health center visits: hospital supervisors have competing clinical, administrative and M&E responsibilities • Supervisors focus on data collection: little emphasis on quality of care

  3. Health Center Staffing Trained, but not seeing patients in the appropriate discipline No specific training IMCI “clinic” 3-4x/mo

  4. MESH Program Aims 1 Decentralized initial training of health centre nurses Improved nurse practices Improved quality of care at health centers Improved patient outcomes 2 Additional MOH Supervisors Ongoing, on-site mentoring of HC nurses 3 Routine mentoring ,supervision & data for quality improvement

  5. MESH Supports the District Hospital Supervision System • MESH supervisors are MoH employees added to the hospital supervision team • Bigger team = more frequent HC visits • Complements current data collection activities with focus on clinical mentoring • PIH provides technical, financial, and logistical support

  6. MESH Mentoring/Supervision Visits • Intensive • Approx 2 consecutive days per health center • Regular • Each health center visited every 4-6 weeks • Responsive • Dedicate more time to high-need health centers, as identified through M&E and supervision data

  7. Mentoring Domains

  8. Mentoring Visit Structure • Presentation in morning staff meeting • Direct observation of clinical care and side-by-side mentoring • Feedback to nurse mentees • Assess facility issues • Afternoon teaching • Meet with titulaire to discuss findings and recommendations; develop joint action plans

  9. Direct Case Observation • Assess nursing skills, knowledge, decision-making in practice • Model best practices • Promote adherence to national protocols • Provide specific, real-time feedback to mentees • Guides subsequent teaching IMCI mentor providing feedback to nurse mentee at Ndego health center

  10. Observation Checklists: Nurse Practices

  11. Observation Checklist: Nurse Decision-Making

  12. Mentoring/Teaching Activities Kirehe ID mentor teaching ID nurses and titulaire about new PMTCT protocol at Kabuye Health Center.

  13. Systems Improvement In-depth insight into health center operations • Identify operational/systems issues • Problem-solving with nurses and titulaire • Feedback to district hospital and PIH • Promote a culture of systems improvement and advocacy

  14. Gahara ID clinic HIV charts BEFORE MENTORING AFTER MENTORING

  15. Mentoring Tools • Clinical observation checklists • Facility/operations checklists • Knowledge questionnaire • Case scenarios • Patient case recording forms (for nurses) • Supervisor activity log • Issue tracking log • Nurse problem resolution form

  16. Example of Issue Tracking Log

  17. Mentor Training and Support

  18. Mentoring  Monitoring Plus real-time feedback

  19. FORMAL FEEDBACK LOOPS Participants Objectives • Develop action plan based on mentoring & supervision data • Mentor support/training • Mentors • PIH clinical program reps • Technical advisors • MESH management team • Share health center findings • Refine health center action plans with hospital team • Share health center findings • Share and revise health center action plans with titulaires

  20. Measuring the Intervention • Training coverage • Nurses trained per sphere per health center • Knowledge acquisition and retention • Pre- and post-tests • Change in clinical practices • Assessed through observation checklists • Facility improvements • Clinical outcomes • E.g. CD4, weight gain MENTORING

  21. Murakoze cyane!

More Related