Article

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

Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway.
Bulletin of the World Health Organisation (impact factor: 4.64). 05/2012; 90(5):379-84. DOI:10.2471/BLT.11.099580 pp.379-84
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.

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Keywords

action research approach
 
antenatal care
 
colleagues' data
 
data-use workshops
 
district staff
 
encouraging use
 
health information systems
 
health managers lack faith
 
information use
 
local use
 
major health programmes
 
national health data
 
national Health Management Information System
 
own routine data
 
parallel data collection systems
 
primary care outpatients
 
quarterly data-use workshops
 
staff capacity
 
target indicators
 
United Republic