Objectives: To describe critical features of the Ethiopian Pediatric Society (EPS) Quality Improvement (QI) Initiative and to present formative research on mentor models.
Setting: General and referral hospitals in the Addis Ababa area of Ethiopia.
Participants: Eighteen hospitals selected for proximity to the EPS headquarters, prior participation in a recent newborn care training cascade and minimal experience with QI.
Interventions: Education in QI in a 2-hour workshop setting followed by implementation of a facility-based QI project with the support of virtual mentorship or in-person mentorship.
Primary and secondary outcome measures: Primary outcome-QI progress, measured using an adapted Institute for Healthcare Improvement Scale; secondary outcome-contextual factors affecting QI success as measured by the Model for Understanding Success in Quality.
Results: The dose and nature of mentoring encounters differed based on a virtual versus in-person mentoring approach. All QI teams conducted at least one large-scale change. Education of staff was the most common change implemented in both groups. We did not identify contextual factors that predicted greater QI progress.
Conclusions: The EPS QI Initiative demonstrates that education in QI paired with external mentorship can support implementation of QI in low-resource settings. This pragmatic approach to facility-based QI may be a scalable strategy for improving newborn care and outcomes. Further research is needed on the most appropriate instruments for measuring contextual factors in low/middle-income country settings.
Keywords: continuous quality improvement; global health; healthcare quality improvement; paediatrics.
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