Deficiencies in the quality of health care are major limiting factors to the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals for child and maternal health. Quality of patient care in hospitals is firmly on the agendas of Western countries but has been slower to gain traction in developing countries, despite evidence that there is substantial scope for improvement, that hospitals have a major role in child survival, and that inequities in quality may be as important as inequities in access. There is now substantial global experience of strategies and interventions that improve the quality of care for children in hospitals with limited resources. The World Health Organization has developed a toolkit that contains adaptable instruments, including a framework for quality improvement, evidence-based clinical guidelines in the form of the Pocket Book of Hospital Care for Children, teaching material, assessment, and mortality audit tools. These tools have been field-tested by doctors, nurses, and other child health workers in many developing countries. This collective experience was brought together in a global World Health Organization meeting in Bali in 2007. This article describes how many countries are achieving improvements in quality of pediatric care, despite limited resources and other major obstacles, and how the evidence has progressed in recent years from documenting the nature and scope of the problems to describing the effectiveness of innovative interventions. The challenges remain to bring these and other strategies to scale and to support research into their use, impact, and sustainability in different environments.
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April 2008
Special Articles|
April 01 2008
Global Initiatives for Improving Hospital Care for Children: State of the Art and Future Prospects
Harry Campbell, MD, FRCP, FRSE;
Harry Campbell, MD, FRCP, FRSE
aPublic Health Sciences, Institute of Genomics and Molecular Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
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Trevor Duke, MD;
Trevor Duke, MD
bCentre for International Child Health, Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
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Martin Weber;
Martin Weber
cDepartment of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
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Mike English, MBBChir, MD;
Mike English, MBBChir, MD
dKenya Medical Research Institute, Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Nairobi, Kenya
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Susanne Carai, MD;
Susanne Carai, MD
cDepartment of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
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Giorgio Tamburlini, MD, PhD;
Giorgio Tamburlini, MD, PhD
eInstitute for Child Health IRCCS Burlo Garofolo, Trieste, Italy
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Pediatric Hospital Improvement Group
Pediatric Hospital Improvement Group
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Address correspondence to Harry Campbell, MD, FRCP, FRSE, Public Health Sciences, Institute of Genomics and Molecular Medicine, College of Medicine and Vet Medicine University of Edinburgh, Teviot Place, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, United Kingdom. E-mail: Harry.Campbell@ed.ac.uk
Pediatrics (2008) 121 (4): e984–e992.
Article history
Accepted:
September 17 2007
Citation
Harry Campbell, Trevor Duke, Martin Weber, Mike English, Susanne Carai, Giorgio Tamburlini, Pediatric Hospital Improvement Group; Global Initiatives for Improving Hospital Care for Children: State of the Art and Future Prospects. Pediatrics April 2008; 121 (4): e984–e992. 10.1542/peds.2007-1395
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