Objective: To describe the development, implementation and initial outcomes of a national quality improvement (QI) intervention in Ethiopia.
Design: Retrospective descriptive study of initial prototype phase implementation outcomes.
Setting: All public facilities in one selected prototype district in each of four agrarian regions.
Participants: Facility QI teams composed of managers, healthcare workers and health extension workers.
Interventions: The Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement co-designed a three-pronged approach to accelerate health system improvement nationally, which included developing a national healthcare quality strategy (NHQS); building QI capability at all health system levels and introducing scalable district MNH QI collaboratives across four regions, involving healthcare providers and managers.
Outcome measures: Implementation outcomes including fidelity, acceptability, adoption and program effectiveness.
Results: The NHQS was launched in 2016 and governance structures were established at the federal, regional and sub-regional levels to oversee implementation. A total of 212 federal, regional and woreda managers have been trained in context-specific QI methods, and a national FMoH-owned in-service curriculum has been developed. Four prototype improvement collaboratives have been completed with high fidelity and acceptability. About 102 MNH change ideas were tested and a change package was developed with 83 successfully tested ideas.
Conclusion: The initial successes observed are attributable to the FMoH's commitment in implementing the initiative, the active engagement of all stakeholders and the district-wide approach utilized. Challenges included weak data systems and security concerns. The second phase-in 26 district-level collaboratives-is now underway.
Keywords: health systems strengthening; large-scale improvement; maternal and newborn health; quality improvement.
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