Eldis

Please note - this is a temporary window. id21 is joining forces with Eldis and therefore the id21 website has been suspended. Soon all id21 content will be available on the Eldis website.

Assessing the performance of paediatric care in Kenyan district hospitals

In developing countries, one child in 10 dies before its fifth birthday. District hospitals are essential for providing health care to children in these countries. Many district hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa remain under-resourced, with poorly trained staff, run-down equipment, and a lack of drugs and supplies. Tackling these problems requires local, national and international action.

The Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Programme's Centre for Geographic Medicine Research, in Kilifi, Kenya, assessed the quality and performance of inpatient paediatric care in 14 district hospitals throughout the country. 

The information collected showed considerable differences between hospitals. Death caused by anaemia ranged from 3 to 46 percent while overall child mortality ranged between 4 and 15 percent. There were significant problems with the data. Data was either not standardised between hospitals, or missing.  Despite 15 percent of adults being HIV positive, the children were rarely reported as having HIV.  Clinicians reported some medical symptoms, such as pallor, but many others were not recorded.  The recording of a child's weight is crucial when calculating the drug dosage they will receive. However, in two thirds of cases the child’s weight was not recorded. The study also found that:

Existing national and international guidelines for all these conditions were not followed.  Members of staff need better training and guidelines to ensure they make accurate diagnoses and follow the correct procedures for treatment.  The hospitals need more staff, drugs and equipment.  The report recommends the following:

Tackling these problems might need local, national, or even international action.  At an international level, vital mineral supplements for malnourished children must be made available from a reliable source.  At a national level, the essential drugs list should be amended to include Vitamin K.  Action can be taken at local level by using hospital income to buy food supplements.

Source(s):
‘Assessment of inpatient paediatric care in first referral level hospitals in 13 districts in Kenya’, The Lancet 363(9425): 1948-1953, by M. English, F. Esamai and A. Wasunna, 2004 Full document.

Funded by: Kenya Medical Research Institute; Wellcome Trust, UK

id21 Research Highlight: 23 March 2005

Further Information:
Mike English
KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Collaborative Programme
PO Box 43640
00100 GPO
Nairobi
Kenya

Contact the contributor: menglish@wtnairobi.mimcom.net

Kenya Medical Research Institute/Wellcome Trust Collaborative Programme

Other related links:
'Decisions, decisions – adapting the IMCI approach for Kenyan paediatric hospitals'

'Matching policy with practice: effectively treating childhood fever in Kenya'

'Coverage story: how to deliver better child survival'

'Targeting the causes of perinatal mortality in a Kenyan hospital'

'Time after time - why some children keep coming back to hospital'

See id21's collection of links relevant to maternal and child health.

See id21's collection of links relevant to health systems and economics.

Views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of DfID, IDS, id21 or other contributing institutions. Articles featured on the id21 site may be copied or quoted without restriction provided id21 and originating author(s) and institution(s) are acknowledged. Copyright © 2009 IDS. All rights reserved.

id21 is funded by the UK Department for International Development. id21 is one of a family of knowledge services at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex. id21 is a www.oneworld.net partner and an affiliate of www.mediachannel.org. IDS is a charitable company, No. 877338.