TY - JOUR
T1 - Syphilis testing performance in Aboriginal primary health care
T2 - Exploring impact of continuous quality improvement over time
AU - Adily, Armita
AU - Girgis, Seham
AU - D'Este, Catherine
AU - Matthews, Veronica
AU - Ward, Jeanette E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 La Trobe University.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Data from 110 primary healthcare clinics participating in two or more continuous quality improvement (CQI) cycles in preventive care, which included syphilis testing performance (STP) for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged between 15 and 54 years, were used to examine whether the number of audit cycles including syphilis testing was associated over time with STP improvement at clinic level in this specific measure of public health importance. The number of cycles per clinic ranged from two to nine (mode 3). As shown by medical record audit at entry to CQI, only 42 (38%) clinics had tested or approached 50% or more of their eligible clients for syphilis in the prior 24 months. Using mixed effects logistic regression, it was found that the odds of a clinic's STP relative to its first cycle increased only modestly. Counterintuitively, clinics undertaking the most preventive health CQI cycles tended to have the lowest STP throughout. Participation in a general preventive care CQI tool was insufficient to achieve and sustain high rates of STP for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people required for public health benefit. Improving STP requires dedicated effort and greater understanding of barriers to effective CQI within and beyond clinic control.
AB - Data from 110 primary healthcare clinics participating in two or more continuous quality improvement (CQI) cycles in preventive care, which included syphilis testing performance (STP) for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged between 15 and 54 years, were used to examine whether the number of audit cycles including syphilis testing was associated over time with STP improvement at clinic level in this specific measure of public health importance. The number of cycles per clinic ranged from two to nine (mode 3). As shown by medical record audit at entry to CQI, only 42 (38%) clinics had tested or approached 50% or more of their eligible clients for syphilis in the prior 24 months. Using mixed effects logistic regression, it was found that the odds of a clinic's STP relative to its first cycle increased only modestly. Counterintuitively, clinics undertaking the most preventive health CQI cycles tended to have the lowest STP throughout. Participation in a general preventive care CQI tool was insufficient to achieve and sustain high rates of STP for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people required for public health benefit. Improving STP requires dedicated effort and greater understanding of barriers to effective CQI within and beyond clinic control.
KW - Indigenous health care
KW - public health
KW - sexually transmissible infections (STIs)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85079064592&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1071/PY19070
DO - 10.1071/PY19070
M3 - Article
SN - 1448-7527
VL - 26
SP - 178
EP - 183
JO - Australian Journal of Primary Health
JF - Australian Journal of Primary Health
IS - 2
ER -