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Introducing pulse oximetry in IMNCI, primary health facilities in Pune India

Population Size

Not reported
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Years

2020 - 2021

Years statistic card

Associated BioSamples

None/not available

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Geographic coverage

India

Punjab (India)

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Lead time

Other

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Summary

Assessing the feasibility of introducing pulse oximetry in the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness programme in Pune and explore barriers to and facilitators of effective implementation with assessment of the readiness of the public health system.

Documentation

The aim of the project is to assess the feasibility of introducing pulse oximetry (PO) in the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) programme in Pune and explore barriers to and facilitators of effective implementation with assessment of the readiness of the public health system.

Pneumonia is a leading cause of childhood mortality, accounting for 16% of under-five deaths globally – with the majority occurring in low- and middle-income countries.

For the management of common childhood illnesses, including pneumonia, in low-resource settings, adoption of Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) is globally recommended. IMCI classifications depend on the clinical assessment skills of service providers and this subjectivity might lead to misclassification and inappropriate referral/treatment.

Hypoxemia (low levels of oxygen in the blood) is one of the strongest predictors of pneumonia mortality. Hypoxemia can be measured simply and effectively using pulse oximetry (PO).

The latest IMCI guidelines, from the World Health Organization (WHO), include the use of PO to classify severity of pneumonia in children and manage accordingly. Current IMCI practices in Pune district do not include PO in the treatment algorithms.

The aim of the project is to assess the feasibility of introducing PO in the IMCI programme in Pune and explore barriers to and facilitators of effective implementation with assessment of the readiness of the public health system.

For further information, see: https://www.ed.ac.uk/usher/respire/acute-respiratory-disorders/pulse-oximetry-india"

Dataset type

Health and disease

Dataset sub-type

Not applicable

Keywords

Provenance

Image contrast

Not stated

Biological sample availability

None/not available

Details

Publishing frequency

Other

Version

1.0.0

Modified

08/10/2024

Citation Requirements

RESPIRE Collaboration

Coverage

Start date

09/01/2020

End date

28/02/2021

Time lag

Not applicable

Geographic coverage

India, Punjab (India)

Maximum age range

5

Accessibility

Language

en

Controlled vocabulary

LOCAL

Data Access Request

Dataset pipeline status

Not available

Access rights

Access is managed on a project-by-project basis. Contact the RESPIRE team: https://www.ed.ac.uk/usher/respire/about/projects

Time to dataset access

Other

Data Controller

RESPIRE

Data Processor

RESPIRE

Dataset Types: Health and disease


Collection Sources:

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