Opportunities and barriers in paediatric pulse oximetry for pneumonia in low-resource clinical settings: a qualitative evaluation from Malawi and Bangladesh

Carina King, Nicholas Boyd, Isabeau Walker, Beatiwel Zadutsa, Abdullah H Baqui, Salahuddin Ahmed, Mazharul Islam, Esther Kainja, Bejoy Nambiar, Iain Wilson, Eric D McCollum, Carina King, Nicholas Boyd, Isabeau Walker, Beatiwel Zadutsa, Abdullah H Baqui, Salahuddin Ahmed, Mazharul Islam, Esther Kainja, Bejoy Nambiar, Iain Wilson, Eric D McCollum

Abstract

Objective: To gain an understanding of what challenges pulse oximetry for paediatric pneumonia management poses, how it has changed service provision and what would improve this device for use across paediatric clinical settings in low-income countries.

Design: Focus group discussions (FGDs), with purposive sampling and thematic analysis using a framework approach.

Setting: Community, front-line outpatient, and hospital outpatient and inpatient settings in Malawi and Bangladesh, which provide paediatric pneumonia care.

Participants: Healthcare providers (HCPs) from Malawi and Bangladesh who had received training in pulse oximetry and had been using oximeters in routine paediatric care, including community healthcare workers, non-physician clinicians or medical assistants, and hospital-based nurses and doctors.

Results: We conducted six FGDs, with 23 participants from Bangladesh and 26 from Malawi. We identified five emergent themes: trust, value, user-related experience, sustainability and design. HCPs discussed the confidence gained through the use of oximeters, resulting in improved trust from caregivers and valuing the device, although there were conflicts between the weight given to clinical judgement versus oximeter results. HCPs reported the ease of using oximeters, but identified movement and physically smaller children as measurement challenges. Challenges in sustainability related to battery durability and replacement parts, however many HCPs had used the same device longer than 4 years, demonstrating robustness within these settings. Desirable features included back-up power banks and integrated respiratory rate and thermometer capability.

Conclusions: Pulse oximetry was generally deemed valuable by HCPs for use as a spot-check device in a range of paediatric low-income clinical settings. Areas highlighted as challenges by HCPs, and therefore opportunities for redesign, included battery charging and durability, probe fit and sensitivity in paediatric populations.

Trial registration number: NCT02941237.

Keywords: Pulse oximeter; South Asia; children; oxygen saturation; pneumonia; sub-Saharan Africa.

Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: None declared.

© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Pulse oximeters and probes used by healthcare providers in routine clinical care. (A) Lifebox oximeter and adult universal clip probe used in Malawi (accessed on 1 July 2017 from www.lifebox.org). (B) Masimo Rad5 oximeter and LNCS Y-I Multisite wrap probe used in Bangladesh (accessed on 1 July 2017 from www.pacificmedicalsupply.com).

References

    1. Sazawal S, Black RE. Pneumonia Case Management Trials Group. Effect of pneumonia case management on mortality in neonates, infants, and preschool children: a meta-analysis of community-based trials. Lancet Infect Dis 2003;3:547–56. 10.1016/S1473-3099(03)00737-0
    1. Niessen LW, ten Hove A, Hilderink H, et al. . Comparative impact assessment of child pneumonia interventions. Bull World Health Organ 2009;87:472–80. 10.2471/BLT.08.050872
    1. Walker CL, Rudan I, Liu L, et al. . Global burden of childhood pneumonia and diarrhoea. Lancet 2013;381:1405–16. 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60222-6
    1. World Health Organisation. Oxygen therapy for children: a manual for health workers. Geneva: WHO, 2016.
    1. Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI). WHO Recommendations on the Management of Diarrhoea and Pneumonia in HIV-Infected Infants and Children. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2010.
    1. Orimadegun A, Ogunbosi B, Orimadegun B. Hypoxemia predicts death from severe falciparum malaria among children under 5 years of age in Nigeria: the need for pulse oximetry in case management. Afr Health Sci 2014;14:397–407. 10.4314/ahs.v14i2.16
    1. Chhibber AV, Hill PC, Jafali J, et al. . Child Mortality after Discharge from a Health Facility following Suspected Pneumonia, Meningitis or Septicaemia in Rural Gambia: A Cohort Study. PLoS One 2015;10:e0137095 10.1371/journal.pone.0137095
    1. Hooli S, Colbourn T, Lufesi N, et al. . Predicting hospitalised paediatric pneumonia mortality risk: an external validation of RISC and mRISC, and local tool development (RISC-Malawi) from Malawi. PLoS One 2016;11:e0168126 10.1371/journal.pone.0168126
    1. Wandeler G, Pauchard JY, Zangger E, et al. . Which clinical signs predict hypoxaemia in young Senegalese children with acute lower respiratory tract disease? Paediatr Int Child Health 2015;35:65–8. 10.1179/2046905514Y.0000000153
    1. Basnet S, Adhikari RK, Gurung CK. Hypoxemia in children with pneumonia and its clinical predictors. Indian J Pediatr 2006;73:777–81. 10.1007/BF02790384
    1. Lodha R, Bhadauria PS, Kuttikat AV, et al. . Can clinical symptoms or signs accurately predict hypoxemia in children with acute lower respiratory tract infections? Indian Pediatr 2003;41:129–35.
    1. McCollum ED, King C, Deula R, et al. . Pulse oximetry for children with pneumonia treated as outpatients in rural Malawi. Bull World Health Organ 2016;94:893–902. 10.2471/BLT.16.173401
    1. Duke T, Subhi R, Peel D, et al. . Pulse oximetry: technology to reduce child mortality in developing countries. Ann Trop Paediatr 2009;29:165–75. 10.1179/027249309X12467994190011
    1. Emdin CA, Mir F, Sultana S, et al. . Utility and feasibility of integrating pulse oximetry into the routine assessment of young infants at primary care clinics in Karachi, Pakistan: a cross-sectional study. BMC Pediatr 2015;15:141 10.1186/s12887-015-0463-z
    1. King E, et al. . Pulse oximetry as a screening tool to detect hypoxia associated with early-onset sepsis in asymptomatic newborns: a feasibility study in a low-income country. Br J Med Med Res 2014;4:1115–28. 10.9734/BJMMR/2014/7221
    1. Ginsburg AS, Izadnegahdar R, Klugman KP, et al. . World Pneumonia Day 2016: pulse oximetry and oxygen. Lancet Glob Health 2016;4:e893–4. 10.1016/S2214-109X(16)30296-0
    1. Ginsburg AS, Van Cleve WC, Thompson MI, et al. . Oxygen and pulse oximetry in childhood pneumonia: a survey of healthcare providers in resource-limited settings. J Trop Pediatr 2012;58:389–93. 10.1093/tropej/fmr103
    1. Lifebox. Pulse Oximetry. (accessed 23 Nov 2017).
    1. The Phone Oximeter. (accessed 23 Nov 2017).
    1. Spence H, Baker K, Wharton-Smith A, et al. . Childhood pneumonia diagnostics: community health workers’ and national stakeholders’ differing perspectives of new and existing aids. Glob Health Action 2017;10:1290340 10.1080/16549716.2017.1290340
    1. Nsona H, Mtimuni A, Daelmans B, et al. . Scaling up integrated community case management of childhood illness: update from Malawi. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2012;87:54–60. 10.4269/ajtmh.2012.11-0759
    1. Malalwi Government. Integrated Management of Childhood Illness - Caring for Newborns and Children in the Community: Manual for Health Surveillance Assistants. Lilongwe, Malawi: Minitry of Health, 2008.
    1. Gale NK, Heath G, Cameron E, et al. . Using the framework method for the analysis of qualitative data in multi-disciplinary health research. BMC Med Res Methodol 2013;13:117 10.1186/1471-2288-13-117
    1. Ritchie J, Spencer L. Qualitative data analysis for applied policy research. The qualitative researcher’s companion 2002;573:305–29.
    1. McCollum ED, King C, Hammitt LL, et al. . Reduction of childhood pneumonia mortality in the Sustainable Development era. Lancet Respir Med 2016;4:932–3. 10.1016/S2213-2600(16)30371-X
    1. Ansah EK, Reynolds J, Akanpigbiam S, et al. . “Even if the test result is negative, they should be able to tell us what is wrong with us”: a qualitative study of patient expectations of rapid diagnostic tests for malaria. Malar J 2013;12:258 10.1186/1475-2875-12-258
    1. Hutchinson E, Reyburn H, Hamlyn E, et al. . Bringing the state into the clinic? Incorporating the rapid diagnostic test for malaria into routine practice in Tanzanian primary healthcare facilities. Glob Public Health 2017;12:1077–91. 10.1080/17441692.2015.1091025

Source: PubMed

3
Subskrybuj