LESSONS FROM THE FIELD

 

Improving quality and use of data through data-use workshops: Zanzibar, United Republic of Tanzania

 

Améliorer la qualité et l'utilisation des données grâce aux ateliers d'utilisation de données : l'expérience du Zanzibar

 

Mejorar la calidad y la utilización de datos mediante talleres de utilización de datos: experiencia de Zanzíbar

 

 

Jørn Braa*; Arthur Heywood; Sundeep Sahay

Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, PO Box 1080, Blindern, 0316 Oslo 47, Norway

 

 


ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: In Zanzibar, United Republic of Tanzania, as in many developing countries, health managers lack faith in the national Health Management Information System (HMIS). The establishment of parallel data collection systems generates a vicious cycle: national health data are used little because they are of poor quality, and their relative lack of use, in turn, makes their quality remain poor.
APPROACH: An action research approach was applied to strengthen the use of information and improve data quality in Zanzibar. The underlying premise was that encouraging use in small incremental steps could help to break the vicious cycle and improve the HMIS.
LOCAL SETTING: To test the hypothesis at the national and district levels a project to strengthen the HMIS was established in Zanzibar. The project included quarterly data-use workshops during which district staff assessed their own routine data and critiqued their colleagues' data.
RELEVANT CHANGES: The data-use workshops generated inputs that were used by District Health Information Software developers to improve the tool. The HMIS, which initially covered only primary care outpatients and antenatal care, eventually grew to encompass all major health programmes and district and referral hospitals. The workshops directly contributed to improvements in data coverage, data set quality and rationalization, and local use of target indicators.
LESSONS LEARNT: Data-use workshops with active engagement of data users themselves can improve health information systems overall and enhance staff capacity for information use, presentation and analysis for decision-making.


RÉSUMÉ

PROBLÈME: Au Zanzibar, République-Unie de Tanzanie, comme dans de nombreux pays en voie de développement, les gestionnaires de la santé manquent de confiance dans le système national d'information de la gestion sanitaire (HMIS, Health Management Information System). La mise en place de systèmes de collecte de données parallèles génère un cercle vicieux : les données de santé nationales sont peu utilisées étant donné leur qualité médiocre et leur faible utilisation n'aide guère à améliorer cette qualité.
APPROCHE: Une approche d'action-recherche a été appliquée en vue de renforcer l'utilisation de l'information et d'améliorer la qualité des données au Zanzibar. Le principe sous-jacent était qu'un encouragement à l'utilisation par petites étapes successives pourrait favoriser la rupture du cercle vicieux et améliorer le HMIS.
ENVIRONNEMENT LOCAL: Pour tester l'hypothèse au niveau du pays et du district, un projet visant à renforcer le HMIS a été implémenté au Zanzibar. Ce projet incluait des ateliers trimestriels d'utilisation de données durant lesquels les membres du personnel du district évaluaient leurs propres données de routine tout en analysant de façon critique les données de leurs collègues.
CHANGEMENTS SIGNIFICATIFS: Les ateliers d'utilisation de données ont généré des informations qui ont été utilisées par les développeurs du logiciel d'information sanitaire du district pour améliorer l'outil. Le HMIS, qui ne couvrait initialement que les premiers soins des patients externes et les soins prénataux, a fini par couvrir tous les grands programmes de santé ainsi que tous les hôpitaux du district et de référence.
LEÇONS TIRÉES: Les ateliers d'utilisation de données avec un engagement actif des utilisateurs de données eux-mêmes peuvent améliorer les systèmes d'information sanitaire de façon générale et optimiser l'utilisation de l'information, la présentation et l'analyse en vue de la prise de décision du personnel.


RESUMEN

SITUACIÓN: En Zanzíbar, República Unida de Tanzanía, como en muchos países en desarrollo, los gestores de salud no tienen fe en el Sistema Nacional de Gestión Sanitaria. El establecimiento de sistemas de obtención de datos paralelos crea un círculo vicioso: los datos de salud nacionales se usan poco porque son de poca calidad, y su relativa falta de uso, a su vez, impide que su calidad mejore.
ENFOQUE: Se aplicó un enfoque de investigación-acción para aumentar la utilización de información y mejorar la calidad de los datos en Zanzíbar. La premisa subyacente era que la estimulación de la utilización en pequeños pasos graduales podría ayudar a romper el círculo vicioso y mejorar el Sistema Nacional de Gestión Sanitaria.
MARCO REGIONAL: Para probar la hipótesis a nivel nacional y de distrito, se estableció un proyecto para fortalecer el Sistema Nacional de Gestión Sanitaria en Zanzíbar. El proyecto incluyó talleres de utilización de datos trimestrales en los que el personal del distrito evaluó sus datos rutinarios y criticó los de sus compañeros.
CAMBIOS IMPORTANTES: Los talleres de utilización de datos generaron aportaciones que los desarrolladores del software de información sanitaria del distrito emplearon para mejorar la herramienta. El Sistema Nacional de Gestión Sanitaria, que inicialmente solo cubría pacientes de atención primaria y atención prenatal, creció para abarcar todos los programas importantes de salud, así como hospitales de derivación y de distrito. Los talleres contribuyeron directamente mejorar la cobertura de datos, la calidad y racionalización del conjunto de datos, y el uso local de indicadores de objetivos.
LECCIONES APRENDIDAS: Los talleres de utilización de datos con participación activa de los usuarios de los datos pueden mejorar los sistemas de información de salud en conjunto, así como la capacidad del personal para utilizar, presentar y analizar la información para tomar decisiones.





 

 

Introduction

Good health information systems are crucial for addressing health challenges and improving health service delivery in developing countries.1 However, the quality of the data produced by such systems is often poor and the data are not used effectively for decision-making.2 Although there has been increasing international attention to the need to develop strong health information systems, it has proved difficult to do so for several reasons, including fragmentation and lack of coordination of health programmes and insistence by international agencies on maintaining their own vertical systems 3; lack of shared data standards 4; unrealistic ambitions 5; inability of system developers to handle complex organizational, social and cultural issues 6; and problems of sustainability.7 The Health Metrics Network, established in 2005, has been instrumental in addressing the problem of fragmentation in health information systems through its technical framework,8 which promotes a data warehouse approach to information system integration,3, 9 and in creating global consensus on the need for all actors to join forces and work towards integrated systems. Zanzibar, in the United Republic of Tanzania, provides an early example of this shift towards integration and the use of an integrated data warehouse/repository application to achieve it.

A key hypothesis in the experience reported in this paper is that data quality and data use are interrelated: poor quality data will not be used, and because they are not used, the data will remain of poor quality; conversely, greater use of data will help to improve their quality, which will in turn lead to more data use. This hypothesis was tested through data-use workshops, which sought to encourage data use and enhance data quality by promoting systematic peer review, building teamwork and stimulating self-assessment, using indicators to measure targets.

 

Background and methods

Zanzibar consists of two islands, each making up a health zone; one island comprises six districts and the other four. As part of a health system strengthening project,10 in 2005 the Health Management Information System (HMIS) Unit of the Ministry of Health, with support from the Danish International Development Agency, launched a process aimed at strengthening the HMIS, improving data reporting and implementing the District Health Information Software (DHIS) ( Fig. 1 ). DHIS is a software tool for collection, validation, analysis and presentation of aggregate statistical data managed in multiple data sets and tailored to support integrated health information management activities. It is designed to serve as a district-based country data warehouse that addresses both local and national needs. Version 2 of the program is an open-source web-based software package available free of charge ( www.DHIS2.org ).11 It is being used by national health management information systems in numerous countries in Africa and Asia.

Quarterly data-use workshops were held in which district health management team (DHMT) members (roughly seven per district) presented their district's routine data to their peers from other districts. The workshops lasted approximately 5 days each and were facilitated by external facilitators from the Health Information Systems Programme, supported by the Zanzibar HMIS Unit and selected health zone staff. The workshops began in 2005 and have continued since then. Most workshops are now being run by the HMIS Unit without outside help.

During the workshops, each district or programme presents and assesses its own data using standardized analysis templates based on the Millennium Development Goals and local strategic plans, after which their peers discuss and critique these presentations. The workshops encourage self-assessment and provide an opportunity to compare presentations, identify common issues relating to data quality and health services performance, promote local involvement and improve data quality. They also contribute direct feedback to HMIS planners for the revision of indicators and data sets and to software developers for the design of new functionalities, reports and other features.

As participants became more familiar and proficient with data-handling processes (e.g. indicators, analysis, display) and the tools (e.g. DHIS, Excel pivot tables and graphs), the length of their participation in workshops became shorter. At the same time, as more programmes started to use DHIS, more programme managers participated and the overall workshop duration increased.

 

Achievements

Improvements were noted in the following areas as a result of the data-use workshops:

Data collection

Forms were simplified on the basis of revised indicator and data sets, dramatically reducing the number of data elements collected and thus the workload of facility staff. This simplification was achieved largely because workshop participants realized that it was unnecessary to disaggregate some data (e.g. by age, sex or uncommon diseases) as the disaggregated data were not being used. Similarly, duplication of data collection by different programmes was virtually eliminated (for example, the Reproductive and Child Health Programme stopped collecting data on human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] infection, immunization and malaria) and data gaps were filled. Changes were agreed collectively through improved communication fostered by the workshops and supported by strong leadership from the Ministry of Health.

Data submission improved considerably, with districts reporting more regularly on most data forms. The process began modestly, focusing on a couple of programmes, but other programmes gradually saw the value of using the national HMIS rather than their own parallel data collection systems, and more programmes (and hospitals, including the national referral hospital) were added. Indicator set changes, including some reductions in indicators, were negotiated with programmes jointly each year through the HMIS Unit, the Health Information Systems Programme and the two health zones.

Integration

The workshops provided a stimulus for integration of the previously separate data sets and databases of primary health-care units, hospitals and programmes, and allowed district health management team members to gain a better idea of the roles played by different actors, which improved practical collaboration. Integration of programme data into a single DHIS database -with one national data set covering the Millennium Development Goals indicators, poverty reduction and national strategic plan indicators and programme-specific indicators -was a major achievement. Integration was a slow process, however, as some externally funded programmes were initially reluctant to share "their" data and did not trust the quality or timeliness of the national database.

Data quality

Data quality improved dramatically, thanks to increased use of quality checks (for timeliness, correctness, consistency and completeness of data) at the facility level, use of computer checks by districts and practical experience gained under supervision during workshops. Mistakes were identified by participants when data were presented during workshops, sometimes leading to heated discussion of quality issues, which made a strong impression on participants.

Data analysis and interpretation

At the start of the process, most district health management team staff did not think in terms of indicators, and their presentations focused on raw data. As information officers and programme managers became more competent in using the HMIS, data analysis tools (targets and indicators) became more widely used and understood, which strengthened self-assessment and "epidemiological thinking". The link between plans, targets and indicators was emphasized, which helped to increase the use of indicators at local levels and the analysis of coverage and quality of service delivery. Fig. 1 shows a screenshot of the DHIS dashboard displaying analytical graphs. Some examples of improved local information use are summarized in Table 1.

 

 

Problem-solving skills

District health management team members honed their ability to solve problems using HMIS data as they gained greater appreciation of the value of improved data quality and felt more competent to perform HMIS tasks and apply epidemiological approaches to daily data management issues.

Team work

Team work improved considerably as the district health management teams shared information about service delivery and used the HMIS to monitor and evaluate progress towards targets set in their district annual plans. Leaders became more confident in making evidence-based decisions to improve quality of care based on collective values developed through the data-use workshops. While a "culture of information" was not fully established, significant strides were made in that direction.

Practical computer skills

Workshop participants improved their computer skills in using DHIS for analysis, presentation and dissemination and also enhanced their knowledge of basic hardware and software maintenance, virus protection and backups. Software developers benefited from insights into new requirements and gained a better understanding of weaknesses related to local context and configuration.

Presentation skills

DHMT members' presentation skills were initially weak, as they were unused to drawing graphs, using PowerPoint, engaging in debate or offering constructive criticism. These skills improved dramatically as a result of the workshops, especially when standardized templates for presentations were developed. Local HMIS Unit and health zone personnel acquired sufficient skills to run the workshops without outside facilitators. Box 1 summarizes the lessons learnt from this experience.

 

 

Conclusion

The data-use workshops approach developed in Zanzibar helped to strengthen the United Republic of Tanzania's HMIS and thereby its overall health system, providing a concrete example of health information systems strengthening. The approach has been applied in other countries, such as in Kenya and Rwanda, where it has become an institutionalized part of quarterly review processes.

 

References

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Submitted: 18 November 2011
Revised version received: 29 January 2012
Accepted: 31 January 2012
Competing interests: None declared.

 

 

* Correspondence to: Jørn Braa (e-mail: jornbraa@gmail.com).

World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
E-mail: bulletin@who.int