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Operational characteristics of antiretroviral therapy clinics in Zambia: a time and motion analysis

Cited 8 time in Web of Science Cited 9 time in Scopus
Authors

Tampi, Radhika P.; Tembo, Taniya; Mukumba-Mwenechanya, Mpande; Sharma, Anjali; Dowdy, David W.; Holmes, Charles B.; Bolton-Moore, Carolyn; Sikazwe, Izukanji; Tucker, Austin; Sohn, Hojoon

Issue Date
2019-04
Publisher
BMC
Citation
BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Vol.19
Abstract
BackgroundThe mass scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Zambia has taken place in the context of limited infrastructure and human resources resulting in many operational side-effects. In this study, we aimed to empirically measure current workload of ART clinic staff and patient wait times and service utilization.MethodsWe conducted time and motion (TAM) studies from both the healthcare worker (HCW) and patient perspectives at 10 ART clinics throughout Zambia. Trained personnel recorded times for consecutive discrete activities based on direct observation of clinical and non-clinical activities performed by counselors, clinical officers, nurses, and pharmacy technicians. For patient TAM, we recruited consenting patients and recorded times of arrival and departure and major ART services utilized. Data from 10 clinics were pooled to evaluate median time per patient spent for each activity and patient duration of stay in the clinic.ResultsThe percentage of observed clinical time for direct patient interaction (median time per patient encounter) was 43.1% for ART counselors (4min, interquartile range [IQR] 2-7), 46.1% for nurses (3min, IQR 2-4), 57.2% for pharmacy technicians (2min, IQR 1-2), and 78.5% for clinical officers (3min, IQR 2-5). Patient workloads for HCWs were heaviest between 8AM and 12PM with few clinical activities observed after 2PM. The length of patient visits was inversely associated with arrival time - patients arriving prior to 8AM spent 61% longer at the clinic than those arriving after 8AM (277 vs. 171min). Overall, patients spent 219min on average for non-clinical visits, and 244min for clinical visits, but this difference was not significant in rural clinics. In comparison, total time patients spent directly with clinic staff were 9 and 12min on average for non-clinical and clinical visits.ConclusionCurrent Zambian ART clinic operations include substantial inefficiencies for both patients and HCWs, with workloads heavily concentrated in the first few hours of clinic opening, limiting HCW and patient interaction time. Use of a differentiated care model may help to redistribute workloads during operational hours and prevent backlogs of patients waiting for hours before clinic opening, which may substantially improve ART delivery in the Zambian context.
ISSN
1472-6963
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201759
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4096-z
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Human Systems Medicine
Research Area 결핵, 국제보건, 에이즈

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