TY - JOUR
T1 - Community and District Empowerment for Scale-up (CODES)
T2 - A complex district-level management intervention to improve child survival in Uganda: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
AU - Waiswa, Peter
AU - O'Connell, Thomas
AU - Bagenda, Danstan
AU - Mullachery, Pricila
AU - Mpanga, Flavia
AU - Henriksson, Dorcus Kiwanuka
AU - Katahoire, Anne Ruhweza
AU - Ssegujja, Eric
AU - Mbonye, Anthony K.
AU - Peterson, Stefan Swartling
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Waiswa et al.
PY - 2016/3/11
Y1 - 2016/3/11
N2 - Background: Innovative and sustainable strategies to strengthen districts and other sub-national health systems and management are urgently required to reduce child mortality. Although highly effective evidence-based and affordable child survival interventions are well-known, at the district level, lack of data, motivation, analytic and planning capacity often impedes prioritization and management weaknesses impede implementation. The Community and District Empowerment for Scale-up (CODES) project is a complex management intervention designed to test whether districts when empowered with data and management tools can prioritize and implement evidence-based child survival interventions equitably. Methods: The CODES strategy combines management, diagnostic, and evaluation tools to identify and analyze the causes of bottlenecks to implementation, build capacity of district management teams to implement context-specific solutions, and to foster community monitoring and social accountability to increase demand for services. CODES combines UNICEF tools designed to systematize priority setting, allocation of resources and problem solving with Community dialogues based on Citizen Report Cards and U-Reports used to engage and empower communities in monitoring health service provision and to demand for quality services. Implementation and all data collection will be by the districts teams or local Community-based Organizations who will be supported by two local implementing partners. The study will be evaluated as a cluster randomized trial with eight intervention and eight comparison districts over a period of 3 years. Evaluation will focus on differences in uptake of child survival interventions and will follow an intention-to-treat analysis. We will also document and analyze experiences in implementation including changes in management practices. Discussion: By increasing the District Health Management Teams' capacity to prioritize and implement context-specific solutions, and empowering communities to become active partners in service delivery, coverage of child survival interventions will increase. Lessons learned on strengthening district-level managerial capacities and mechanisms for community monitoring may have implications, not only in Uganda but also in other similar settings, especially with regard to accelerating effective coverage of key child survival interventions using locally available resources. Trial registration number:ISRCTN15705788 , Date of registration; 24 July 2015.
AB - Background: Innovative and sustainable strategies to strengthen districts and other sub-national health systems and management are urgently required to reduce child mortality. Although highly effective evidence-based and affordable child survival interventions are well-known, at the district level, lack of data, motivation, analytic and planning capacity often impedes prioritization and management weaknesses impede implementation. The Community and District Empowerment for Scale-up (CODES) project is a complex management intervention designed to test whether districts when empowered with data and management tools can prioritize and implement evidence-based child survival interventions equitably. Methods: The CODES strategy combines management, diagnostic, and evaluation tools to identify and analyze the causes of bottlenecks to implementation, build capacity of district management teams to implement context-specific solutions, and to foster community monitoring and social accountability to increase demand for services. CODES combines UNICEF tools designed to systematize priority setting, allocation of resources and problem solving with Community dialogues based on Citizen Report Cards and U-Reports used to engage and empower communities in monitoring health service provision and to demand for quality services. Implementation and all data collection will be by the districts teams or local Community-based Organizations who will be supported by two local implementing partners. The study will be evaluated as a cluster randomized trial with eight intervention and eight comparison districts over a period of 3 years. Evaluation will focus on differences in uptake of child survival interventions and will follow an intention-to-treat analysis. We will also document and analyze experiences in implementation including changes in management practices. Discussion: By increasing the District Health Management Teams' capacity to prioritize and implement context-specific solutions, and empowering communities to become active partners in service delivery, coverage of child survival interventions will increase. Lessons learned on strengthening district-level managerial capacities and mechanisms for community monitoring may have implications, not only in Uganda but also in other similar settings, especially with regard to accelerating effective coverage of key child survival interventions using locally available resources. Trial registration number:ISRCTN15705788 , Date of registration; 24 July 2015.
KW - Bottleneck analysis
KW - Child survival
KW - Community monitoring
KW - District strengthening
KW - Evidence-based
KW - Health systems strengthening
KW - LQAS
KW - Management tools
KW - Uganda
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84960435516&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84960435516&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s13063-016-1241-4
DO - 10.1186/s13063-016-1241-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 26968957
AN - SCOPUS:84960435516
SN - 1745-6215
VL - 17
JO - Trials
JF - Trials
IS - 1
M1 - 135
ER -