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Message in a Bottle: How evidence based medicine and program chan | 56644
Journal of Clinical and Cellular Immunology

Journal of Clinical and Cellular Immunology
Open Access

ISSN: 2155-9899

+44 1223 790975

Message in a Bottle: How evidence based medicine and program change model were used to improve asthma management in a low income Emergency Department, Papua New Guinea


2nd International Conference on Autoimmunity

November 06-07, 2017 | Frankfurt, Germany

Heath R

Modilon Hospital, Madang, Papua New Guinea

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Clin Cell Immunol

Abstract :

Objective: To implement evidence based practice guidelines using a culturally sensitive change management approach and improve asthma management in a developing world setting. Methods Setting: Emergency Department, Modilon hospital, Madang, Papua New Guinea. Nearly 700,000 people live in Madang Province and Modilon Hospital (with 258 beds) is the only government hospital in the region. Study Design: Asthma management analysis, A questionnaire was completed by Emergency Department staff during consultations with known asthma patients consisting of patient demographics, departmental and discharge management. Results were compared to international evidence based guidelines. 2) Action research with program change model: An action research approach using a 4 step model of program change (exposure, adoption, implementation and practice) was adopted with staff education and consultation to design and implement a new departmental asthma guideline. Culturally sensitivity and flexibility were maintained throughout. 3) Asthma management analysis: 3 months after the guideline implementation asthma management was re-analysed in the form of a questionnaire and results compared to original management. A ��?post mortem��? questionnaire was also conducted with staff to review progress and inform practice learnings. Outcomes measured: Treatment in line with evidenced-based asthma management guidelines, patient perception of treatment and frequency of Emergency department visits. Staff perceptions of treatment change outcomes and approach in managing the clinical changes. Results: Prior to intervention, asthma management involved frequent use of IV and oral antibiotics, IV steroids, paracetamol, simultaneous use of multiple short acting oral bronchodilators, limited use of oral steroids (of variable dose and duration) and no spacers, preventative steroid inhaled therapy, or asthma action plans. At 3 months staff felt the program improved asthma management. Data is still being collected. Conclusion: A 4 step model of program change was used to develop and implement asthma treatment guidelines.

Biography :

Rebecca Heath is a UK trained medic who has worked in the Manchester, Melbourne, the Nepali Himalayas and Ghana before her interest in rural and remote medicine and Aboriginal health found her at home in the Red Desert of Alice Springs for a couple of years before heading to Papua New Guinea in the Pacific to teach Emergency Medicine and work on capacity building programs in Madang. Keen to help find ways to develop practical and useful strategies to update practice in low income settings, as well as understand some of the complex challenges these contexts provide, she has focused on asthma, which is notoriously poorly managed in the Pacific

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