A report of the 2 year documentation and review of maternal and perinatal deaths in secondary and tertiary health facilities in Delta State, 2017-2018.
The document provides updates on several technical milestones and developments of the WAH-EMR system. It discusses 1) new usage monitoring and report generation functionality, 2) the piloting of a synchronized patient alert system via SMS to four RHUs, and 3) the development of a mobile midwife system to allow electronic data collection in the field and syncing to the RHU-based EMR. It also outlines plans for increased interoperability between the RHU system and other facilities like provincial hospitals and DOH systems.
MCTS is an web based information system for tracking the mother and children(up to 5 years of age), health care services to improve the health care delivery planning and its outcome.
The Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) is an Indian government initiative to track maternal and child health beneficiaries and improve service delivery. It registers pregnant women and children under 5 for antenatal care, delivery care, postnatal care, and immunizations. Frontline health workers use MCTS to generate work plans, ensure all beneficiaries receive scheduled services, and update the system in real time. Over 2.8 crore mothers and 2.06 crore children have been registered in MCTS so far. The government aims for 100% registration and updating of services provided through the system.
The document outlines Alabama Medicaid's telemedicine policy, which began covering psychiatry and dermatology via telemedicine in 2010 and expanded to all physician specialties in 2012. To participate, physicians must be licensed in Alabama, enrolled as a Medicaid provider, and submit a telemedicine agreement form. Telemedicine services must use interactive audio/video and comply with privacy and security standards. Utilization has grown from $3,800 in 2010 to over $31,800 in 2014, mostly for mental health services. The policy also discusses the creation of Regional Care Organizations to coordinate care for Medicaid beneficiaries starting in 2015.
The Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) is an initiative by the Government of India to monitor the health of pregnant mothers and children under 5 years old. The goal of MCTS is to reduce maternal and infant mortality rates by ensuring mothers receive antenatal care, delivery assistance, and postnatal care, and that children complete their immunizations. Health workers use MCTS to register pregnant women and newborns, send alerts on upcoming health services, and track the services received to strengthen health outcomes. Over 1 crore pregnant women have been registered under MCTS so far.
This document provides Medicare payment data and summaries for ambulance services for fiscal year 2013. Key points include:
- Total Medicare payments for ambulance services in 2013 were $4.9 billion, a slight 0.2% decrease from 2012.
- Ground mileage and BLS non-emergency transports saw small increases in payments and volume from 2012 to 2013.
- Dialysis-related transports increased 6.15% in volume and 3.44% in payments from 2012 to 2013.
- Data is provided on national, state (Wisconsin), and dialysis transport levels. Recent Medicare rule changes and reports addressing ambulance utilization and payments are also summarized.
An initiative of Ministry of Health & Family Welfare to leverage information technology for ensuring delivery of full spectrum of healthcare and immunization services to pregnant women and children up to 5 years of age.
The document provides updates on several technical milestones and developments of the WAH-EMR system. It discusses 1) new usage monitoring and report generation functionality, 2) the piloting of a synchronized patient alert system via SMS to four RHUs, and 3) the development of a mobile midwife system to allow electronic data collection in the field and syncing to the RHU-based EMR. It also outlines plans for increased interoperability between the RHU system and other facilities like provincial hospitals and DOH systems.
MCTS is an web based information system for tracking the mother and children(up to 5 years of age), health care services to improve the health care delivery planning and its outcome.
The Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) is an Indian government initiative to track maternal and child health beneficiaries and improve service delivery. It registers pregnant women and children under 5 for antenatal care, delivery care, postnatal care, and immunizations. Frontline health workers use MCTS to generate work plans, ensure all beneficiaries receive scheduled services, and update the system in real time. Over 2.8 crore mothers and 2.06 crore children have been registered in MCTS so far. The government aims for 100% registration and updating of services provided through the system.
The document outlines Alabama Medicaid's telemedicine policy, which began covering psychiatry and dermatology via telemedicine in 2010 and expanded to all physician specialties in 2012. To participate, physicians must be licensed in Alabama, enrolled as a Medicaid provider, and submit a telemedicine agreement form. Telemedicine services must use interactive audio/video and comply with privacy and security standards. Utilization has grown from $3,800 in 2010 to over $31,800 in 2014, mostly for mental health services. The policy also discusses the creation of Regional Care Organizations to coordinate care for Medicaid beneficiaries starting in 2015.
The Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) is an initiative by the Government of India to monitor the health of pregnant mothers and children under 5 years old. The goal of MCTS is to reduce maternal and infant mortality rates by ensuring mothers receive antenatal care, delivery assistance, and postnatal care, and that children complete their immunizations. Health workers use MCTS to register pregnant women and newborns, send alerts on upcoming health services, and track the services received to strengthen health outcomes. Over 1 crore pregnant women have been registered under MCTS so far.
This document provides Medicare payment data and summaries for ambulance services for fiscal year 2013. Key points include:
- Total Medicare payments for ambulance services in 2013 were $4.9 billion, a slight 0.2% decrease from 2012.
- Ground mileage and BLS non-emergency transports saw small increases in payments and volume from 2012 to 2013.
- Dialysis-related transports increased 6.15% in volume and 3.44% in payments from 2012 to 2013.
- Data is provided on national, state (Wisconsin), and dialysis transport levels. Recent Medicare rule changes and reports addressing ambulance utilization and payments are also summarized.
An initiative of Ministry of Health & Family Welfare to leverage information technology for ensuring delivery of full spectrum of healthcare and immunization services to pregnant women and children up to 5 years of age.
This document provides guidelines for implementing Maternal Death Reviews (MDRs) at health facilities and in communities in Punjab, India. It aims to establish mechanisms for undertaking MDRs to identify gaps and reasons for maternal deaths, in order to take corrective actions and improve health services. MDRs will be conducted through Facility Based MDRs and Community Based MDRs. Guidelines are provided on reporting maternal deaths, conducting investigations, monthly reviews, and reporting to higher levels to ensure a robust MDR system across health facilities and communities in Punjab. Standardized forms and processes are outlined to guide implementation of MDRs at various levels.
This document outlines Zambia's national operational plan for scaling up voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) from 2012-2015. It aims to achieve 80% VMMC coverage among HIV-negative men aged 15-49 by performing over 1.8 million VMMCs. This will involve rapidly increasing the annual number of VMMCs from around 85,000 in 2011 to nearly 870,000 in 2015 through expanded service delivery and demand generation. The plan addresses gaps in current VMMC programming and outlines strategies, targets, and costs for leadership, coordination, service delivery models, communication, and other factors required to successfully scale up VMMC in Zambia.
Revised standard operating procedures (SOP), roles, and scope of activities i...Rivu Basu
This document outlines the roles and responsibilities of medical colleges in India's National Tuberculosis Elimination Program (NTEP). It establishes task forces at the national (NTF), zonal (ZTF), and state (STF) levels to coordinate activities between medical colleges and NTEP. The STF will facilitate establishing diagnostic and treatment centers, laboratories, and training in medical colleges. Medical colleges are expected to provide TB diagnosis, treatment, preventive therapy, advocacy, training, decentralized drug-resistant TB care, research, and public health support. Private provider engagement, active case finding, and making field areas TB-free are also roles of medical colleges. Standard operating procedures provide guidelines for constituting STFs and their
The document provides an overview of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in India. It discusses the background and history of NRHM, including why it was launched. The key goals of NRHM are to reduce child and maternal mortality and provide universal access to primary healthcare, especially in rural areas. It describes the organizational structure of NRHM at national, state, district, block and village levels. The major strategies, approaches and initiatives of NRHM are also summarized.
The document summarizes key Indian health planning committees from 1943 to 1973. The Bhore Committee in 1943 recommended establishing a national health service and increasing healthcare infrastructure and resources in India. The Mudaliar Committee in 1962 reviewed developments since Bhore and found shortfalls in health spending and infrastructure. The Chadha Committee in 1963 focused on malaria eradication and recommended strengthening primary health centers. Subsequent committees addressed issues like integrating family planning activities, developing a unified health worker cadre, and balancing disease control with general healthcare as India worked to develop its public health system.
The document summarizes the healthcare delivery system of Bangladesh. It describes the management structure from the national level down to community clinics and health centers at the ward level. At each level (national, divisional, district, upazilla, union, ward) the facilities, manpower, services, and roles are defined. The system follows an administrative hierarchy with the secretariat responsible for policy planning at the national level and directorates implementing programs. Healthcare is provided through numerous public facilities across the country aimed at primary, secondary and tertiary care delivery from the community to national levels.
Mathias presentation Kabarole District Perform to Scale progectMtMt37
1) Kabarole district in Uganda was working to reduce fresh stillbirths from 17.7 per 1000 births to 12 per 1000 births by June 2020 through their MSI workplan.
2) Their HR/HS strategies included increasing ANC attendance, strengthening emergency obstetric care, improving coordination, and strengthening performance management.
3) As of August 2020, they had made progress implementing activities like community sensitization, health worker training, and support supervision, but further implementation was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. They reflected on lessons learned and requested to extend their implementation timeframe.
This document provides guidelines for conducting Maternal Death Reviews (MDR) in India. It contains information on conducting both community-based and facility-based MDR. It outlines the roles and responsibilities at the district and state level. It also includes training schedules, data analysis procedures, and monitoring guidelines. Formats for MDR data collection and reporting are provided in the annexures. The overall goal is to accelerate the reduction of India's maternal mortality ratio through reviewing maternal deaths to identify preventable factors.
This document outlines the Zuellig Family Foundation's Community Health Partnership Program which aims to improve governance, health systems, and institutions to improve maternal and child health outcomes. The program involves training municipal mayors, health officers, and civic leaders (called "Municipal Health Leaders") to strengthen their understanding of health and initiate local health programs. Selection criteria for participating municipalities include needing improved health outcomes and commitment from local leaders. The program has shown success in reducing maternal mortality ratios in participating municipalities and aims to expand its model through a new partnership with the Department of Health.
Unit 4 - District Health Services Management Part 1 pdfDipesh Tikhatri
The document provides information on district health services management in Nepal. It discusses the background and organization of District Health Offices (DHOs), their roles and responsibilities, programs managed, staffing patterns, and job descriptions for key positions like the Chief of DHO, Public Health Chief, and Public Health Officer. The functions of DHOs have now been transitioned to new Health Offices under provincial health directorates.
This document summarizes a term paper on critically analyzing Nepal's 2006 National Policy on Skilled Birth Attendance. It includes a recommendation letter, approval sheet, acknowledgements, and table of contents sections. The introduction provides background on Nepal's high maternal and neonatal mortality rates and the goal of the policy to increase skilled attendance at birth. It defines skilled birth attendants and outlines the policy's objectives, strategies, and institutional arrangements to strengthen training, deployment, and support for skilled birth attendants to improve health outcomes.
Analisis situasi dan rekomendasi dalam rangka penguatan implementasi aDSM.pdflinda399806
The document discusses plans to strengthen the implementation of active drug safety monitoring (aDSM) in Indonesia based on recommendations from a 2021 technical assistance on aDSM. It outlines the background of aDSM implementation in Indonesia, recommendations from the technical assistance, and development of an active MESO (monitoring and management of adverse drug effects) technical guidelines. Planned next steps include socializing the MESO guidelines, developing standardized aDSM training for healthcare workers, and training on verbal autopsies to help determine causes of deaths that occur at home. The goal is to improve aDSM practices such as adverse event reporting and analysis to strengthen pharmacovigilance of tuberculosis drugs in Indonesia.
The Integrated Disease Surveillance Project (IDSP) was launched in 2004 with World Bank assistance to improve disease outbreak detection and response in India. It established a decentralized surveillance system from the national to district levels. Key components include syndromic surveillance, reporting of priority diseases, strengthening laboratories, and using information technology. However, integration with other health programs remains a challenge. Issues exist at the national, state, and district levels including staff shortages, lack of coordination, and underreporting that weaken disease surveillance. While IDSP established an important framework, ongoing efforts are needed for it to reach its full potential.
The document outlines India's "MAA" program to promote breastfeeding nationwide. Key points:
- The program will target over 3.9 crore mothers and babies to improve breastfeeding rates. It will involve mass media campaigns, training for community health workers and facility staff, and incentives for breastfeeding promotion activities.
- The goals are to revitalize breastfeeding promotion efforts, achieve higher rates of practices like early initiation and exclusive breastfeeding, and improve related health outcomes for mothers and children.
- Implementation will include orientation for ASHAs, ANMs and facility staff; capacity building; monitoring and incentive programs; and coordination between national, state, district and local levels.
The document provides guidelines for conducting maternal death reviews (MDR) at the community and facility levels in India. It outlines the steps for community-based MDR which includes notifying block medical officers of women's deaths, investigating these deaths using a verbal autopsy form, and reviewing cases. It also describes the roles and responsibilities of different individuals involved in the MDR process at the block, district, and state levels.
Technical Assistance (TA) provided to Far-Western Regional Health Directorate to publish it's annual report under the leadership of Regional Director, Mr. Parsuram Shrestha.
1) The document summarizes the findings of a rapid capacity appraisal conducted in Niger State, Nigeria to assess progress in malaria control capacity after 5 years of support from the Support to National Malaria Programme (SuNMaP).
2) It finds that while some improvements have been made in areas like monitoring and evaluation and program management, capacity remains weak, especially in areas like disease surveillance and regulation. In particular, most staff in the state malaria control program have low qualifications.
3) Key recommendations include increasing government funding for malaria control, strengthening data management systems, ensuring technical assistance builds state capacity, and supporting establishment of a drug management agency.
Appendix 4 sparc maf final draft report april 2003 OSSAP-MDGS
This document presents Nigeria's Millennium Development Goals Acceleration Framework and Action Plan for improving maternal health (MDG 5). It identifies five priority interventions: family planning, skilled birth attendants, emergency obstetric and newborn care, universal antenatal and postnatal care coverage, and improved referral services. Bottlenecks hindering each intervention are analyzed. Acceleration solutions proposed to address bottlenecks include scaling up sensitization, establishing youth centers, training more skilled birth attendants, and decentralizing ambulance services. The plan estimates implementation will cost 65.5 billion naira. A monitoring and evaluation plan is also outlined to track progress, with key recommendations to convene an emergency meeting on commitments and responsibilities for the action
The document defines and describes the health care delivery system in India. It provides definitions of key terms and outlines the structure of the health care system at various levels - central, state, district, block, and village. It describes the roles and responsibilities at each level. It also details the different types of primary health centers in India - subcenters, primary health centers (PHCs), and community health centers (CHCs) - and explains their staffing, services provided, and target populations. The health care delivery system in India aims to provide accessible and comprehensive health care from village to national levels through this multi-tiered structure.
Health Administration deals with promoting health, preventive medicine, medical care, and delivery of health services. It focuses on principles like cooperation between official bodies, basing programs on scientific origins, and avoiding duplication of services. The objectives of health administration include providing total healthcare to improve quality of life. At the state level, the health directorate studies health problems and plans schemes to address them, while providing services and overseeing programs. Primary health centers (PHCs) and community health centers (CHCs) deliver primary care services. The Panchayati Raj system also plays an important role in rural healthcare administration from the village to district levels.
The facial nerve, also known as cranial nerve VII, is one of the 12 cranial nerves originating from the brain. It's a mixed nerve, meaning it contains both sensory and motor fibres, and it plays a crucial role in controlling various facial muscles, as well as conveying sensory information from the taste buds on the anterior two-thirds of the tongue.
This document provides guidelines for implementing Maternal Death Reviews (MDRs) at health facilities and in communities in Punjab, India. It aims to establish mechanisms for undertaking MDRs to identify gaps and reasons for maternal deaths, in order to take corrective actions and improve health services. MDRs will be conducted through Facility Based MDRs and Community Based MDRs. Guidelines are provided on reporting maternal deaths, conducting investigations, monthly reviews, and reporting to higher levels to ensure a robust MDR system across health facilities and communities in Punjab. Standardized forms and processes are outlined to guide implementation of MDRs at various levels.
This document outlines Zambia's national operational plan for scaling up voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) from 2012-2015. It aims to achieve 80% VMMC coverage among HIV-negative men aged 15-49 by performing over 1.8 million VMMCs. This will involve rapidly increasing the annual number of VMMCs from around 85,000 in 2011 to nearly 870,000 in 2015 through expanded service delivery and demand generation. The plan addresses gaps in current VMMC programming and outlines strategies, targets, and costs for leadership, coordination, service delivery models, communication, and other factors required to successfully scale up VMMC in Zambia.
Revised standard operating procedures (SOP), roles, and scope of activities i...Rivu Basu
This document outlines the roles and responsibilities of medical colleges in India's National Tuberculosis Elimination Program (NTEP). It establishes task forces at the national (NTF), zonal (ZTF), and state (STF) levels to coordinate activities between medical colleges and NTEP. The STF will facilitate establishing diagnostic and treatment centers, laboratories, and training in medical colleges. Medical colleges are expected to provide TB diagnosis, treatment, preventive therapy, advocacy, training, decentralized drug-resistant TB care, research, and public health support. Private provider engagement, active case finding, and making field areas TB-free are also roles of medical colleges. Standard operating procedures provide guidelines for constituting STFs and their
The document provides an overview of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in India. It discusses the background and history of NRHM, including why it was launched. The key goals of NRHM are to reduce child and maternal mortality and provide universal access to primary healthcare, especially in rural areas. It describes the organizational structure of NRHM at national, state, district, block and village levels. The major strategies, approaches and initiatives of NRHM are also summarized.
The document summarizes key Indian health planning committees from 1943 to 1973. The Bhore Committee in 1943 recommended establishing a national health service and increasing healthcare infrastructure and resources in India. The Mudaliar Committee in 1962 reviewed developments since Bhore and found shortfalls in health spending and infrastructure. The Chadha Committee in 1963 focused on malaria eradication and recommended strengthening primary health centers. Subsequent committees addressed issues like integrating family planning activities, developing a unified health worker cadre, and balancing disease control with general healthcare as India worked to develop its public health system.
The document summarizes the healthcare delivery system of Bangladesh. It describes the management structure from the national level down to community clinics and health centers at the ward level. At each level (national, divisional, district, upazilla, union, ward) the facilities, manpower, services, and roles are defined. The system follows an administrative hierarchy with the secretariat responsible for policy planning at the national level and directorates implementing programs. Healthcare is provided through numerous public facilities across the country aimed at primary, secondary and tertiary care delivery from the community to national levels.
Mathias presentation Kabarole District Perform to Scale progectMtMt37
1) Kabarole district in Uganda was working to reduce fresh stillbirths from 17.7 per 1000 births to 12 per 1000 births by June 2020 through their MSI workplan.
2) Their HR/HS strategies included increasing ANC attendance, strengthening emergency obstetric care, improving coordination, and strengthening performance management.
3) As of August 2020, they had made progress implementing activities like community sensitization, health worker training, and support supervision, but further implementation was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. They reflected on lessons learned and requested to extend their implementation timeframe.
This document provides guidelines for conducting Maternal Death Reviews (MDR) in India. It contains information on conducting both community-based and facility-based MDR. It outlines the roles and responsibilities at the district and state level. It also includes training schedules, data analysis procedures, and monitoring guidelines. Formats for MDR data collection and reporting are provided in the annexures. The overall goal is to accelerate the reduction of India's maternal mortality ratio through reviewing maternal deaths to identify preventable factors.
This document outlines the Zuellig Family Foundation's Community Health Partnership Program which aims to improve governance, health systems, and institutions to improve maternal and child health outcomes. The program involves training municipal mayors, health officers, and civic leaders (called "Municipal Health Leaders") to strengthen their understanding of health and initiate local health programs. Selection criteria for participating municipalities include needing improved health outcomes and commitment from local leaders. The program has shown success in reducing maternal mortality ratios in participating municipalities and aims to expand its model through a new partnership with the Department of Health.
Unit 4 - District Health Services Management Part 1 pdfDipesh Tikhatri
The document provides information on district health services management in Nepal. It discusses the background and organization of District Health Offices (DHOs), their roles and responsibilities, programs managed, staffing patterns, and job descriptions for key positions like the Chief of DHO, Public Health Chief, and Public Health Officer. The functions of DHOs have now been transitioned to new Health Offices under provincial health directorates.
This document summarizes a term paper on critically analyzing Nepal's 2006 National Policy on Skilled Birth Attendance. It includes a recommendation letter, approval sheet, acknowledgements, and table of contents sections. The introduction provides background on Nepal's high maternal and neonatal mortality rates and the goal of the policy to increase skilled attendance at birth. It defines skilled birth attendants and outlines the policy's objectives, strategies, and institutional arrangements to strengthen training, deployment, and support for skilled birth attendants to improve health outcomes.
Analisis situasi dan rekomendasi dalam rangka penguatan implementasi aDSM.pdflinda399806
The document discusses plans to strengthen the implementation of active drug safety monitoring (aDSM) in Indonesia based on recommendations from a 2021 technical assistance on aDSM. It outlines the background of aDSM implementation in Indonesia, recommendations from the technical assistance, and development of an active MESO (monitoring and management of adverse drug effects) technical guidelines. Planned next steps include socializing the MESO guidelines, developing standardized aDSM training for healthcare workers, and training on verbal autopsies to help determine causes of deaths that occur at home. The goal is to improve aDSM practices such as adverse event reporting and analysis to strengthen pharmacovigilance of tuberculosis drugs in Indonesia.
The Integrated Disease Surveillance Project (IDSP) was launched in 2004 with World Bank assistance to improve disease outbreak detection and response in India. It established a decentralized surveillance system from the national to district levels. Key components include syndromic surveillance, reporting of priority diseases, strengthening laboratories, and using information technology. However, integration with other health programs remains a challenge. Issues exist at the national, state, and district levels including staff shortages, lack of coordination, and underreporting that weaken disease surveillance. While IDSP established an important framework, ongoing efforts are needed for it to reach its full potential.
The document outlines India's "MAA" program to promote breastfeeding nationwide. Key points:
- The program will target over 3.9 crore mothers and babies to improve breastfeeding rates. It will involve mass media campaigns, training for community health workers and facility staff, and incentives for breastfeeding promotion activities.
- The goals are to revitalize breastfeeding promotion efforts, achieve higher rates of practices like early initiation and exclusive breastfeeding, and improve related health outcomes for mothers and children.
- Implementation will include orientation for ASHAs, ANMs and facility staff; capacity building; monitoring and incentive programs; and coordination between national, state, district and local levels.
The document provides guidelines for conducting maternal death reviews (MDR) at the community and facility levels in India. It outlines the steps for community-based MDR which includes notifying block medical officers of women's deaths, investigating these deaths using a verbal autopsy form, and reviewing cases. It also describes the roles and responsibilities of different individuals involved in the MDR process at the block, district, and state levels.
Technical Assistance (TA) provided to Far-Western Regional Health Directorate to publish it's annual report under the leadership of Regional Director, Mr. Parsuram Shrestha.
1) The document summarizes the findings of a rapid capacity appraisal conducted in Niger State, Nigeria to assess progress in malaria control capacity after 5 years of support from the Support to National Malaria Programme (SuNMaP).
2) It finds that while some improvements have been made in areas like monitoring and evaluation and program management, capacity remains weak, especially in areas like disease surveillance and regulation. In particular, most staff in the state malaria control program have low qualifications.
3) Key recommendations include increasing government funding for malaria control, strengthening data management systems, ensuring technical assistance builds state capacity, and supporting establishment of a drug management agency.
Appendix 4 sparc maf final draft report april 2003 OSSAP-MDGS
This document presents Nigeria's Millennium Development Goals Acceleration Framework and Action Plan for improving maternal health (MDG 5). It identifies five priority interventions: family planning, skilled birth attendants, emergency obstetric and newborn care, universal antenatal and postnatal care coverage, and improved referral services. Bottlenecks hindering each intervention are analyzed. Acceleration solutions proposed to address bottlenecks include scaling up sensitization, establishing youth centers, training more skilled birth attendants, and decentralizing ambulance services. The plan estimates implementation will cost 65.5 billion naira. A monitoring and evaluation plan is also outlined to track progress, with key recommendations to convene an emergency meeting on commitments and responsibilities for the action
The document defines and describes the health care delivery system in India. It provides definitions of key terms and outlines the structure of the health care system at various levels - central, state, district, block, and village. It describes the roles and responsibilities at each level. It also details the different types of primary health centers in India - subcenters, primary health centers (PHCs), and community health centers (CHCs) - and explains their staffing, services provided, and target populations. The health care delivery system in India aims to provide accessible and comprehensive health care from village to national levels through this multi-tiered structure.
Health Administration deals with promoting health, preventive medicine, medical care, and delivery of health services. It focuses on principles like cooperation between official bodies, basing programs on scientific origins, and avoiding duplication of services. The objectives of health administration include providing total healthcare to improve quality of life. At the state level, the health directorate studies health problems and plans schemes to address them, while providing services and overseeing programs. Primary health centers (PHCs) and community health centers (CHCs) deliver primary care services. The Panchayati Raj system also plays an important role in rural healthcare administration from the village to district levels.
Similar to Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response, Delta State Report (20)
The facial nerve, also known as cranial nerve VII, is one of the 12 cranial nerves originating from the brain. It's a mixed nerve, meaning it contains both sensory and motor fibres, and it plays a crucial role in controlling various facial muscles, as well as conveying sensory information from the taste buds on the anterior two-thirds of the tongue.
Satisfying Spa Massage Experience at Just 99 AED - Malayali Kerala Spa AjmanMalayali Kerala Spa Ajman
Our Spa Massage Center Ajman prioritizes efficiency to ensure a satisfying massage experience for our clients at Malayali Kerala Spa Ajman. We offer a hassle-free appointment system, effective health issue identification, and precise massage techniques.
Our Spa in Ajman stands out for its effectiveness in enhancing wellness. Our therapists focus on treating the root cause of issues, providing tailored treatments for each client. We take pride in offering the most satisfying Pakistani Spa service, adjusting treatment plans based on client feedback.
For the most result-oriented Russian Spa treatment in Ajman, visit our Massage Center. Our Russian therapists are skilled in various techniques to address health concerns. Our body-to-body massage is efficient due to individualized care and high-grade massage oils.
VEDANTA AIR AMBULANCE SERVICES IN REWA AT A COST-EFFECTIVE PRICE.pdfVedanta A
Air Ambulance Services In Rewa works in close coordination with ground-based emergency services, including local Emergency Medical Services, fire departments, and law enforcement agencies.
More@: https://tinyurl.com/2shrryhx
More@: https://tinyurl.com/5n8h3wp8
The Ultimate Guide in Setting Up Market Research System in Health-TechGokul Rangarajan
How to effectively start market research in the health tech industry by defining objectives, crafting problem statements, selecting methods, identifying data collection sources, and setting clear timelines. This guide covers all the preliminary steps needed to lay a strong foundation for your research.
"Market Research it too text-booky, I am in the market for a decade, I am living research book" this is what the founder I met on the event claimed, few of my colleagues rolled their eyes. Its true that one cannot over look the real life experience, but one cannot out beat structured gold mine of market research.
Many 0 to 1 startup founders often overlook market research, but this critical step can make or break a venture, especially in health tech.
But Why do they skip it?
Limited resources—time, money, and manpower—are common culprits.
"In fact, a survey by CB Insights found that 42% of startups fail due to no market need, which is like building a spaceship to Mars only to realise you forgot the fuel."
Sudharsan Srinivasan
Operational Partner Pitchworks VC Studio
Overconfidence in their product’s success leads founders to assume it will naturally find its market, especially in health tech where patient needs, entire system issues and regulatory requirements are as complex as trying to perform brain surgery with a butter knife. Additionally, the pressure to launch quickly and the belief in their own intuition further contribute to this oversight. Yet, thorough market research in health tech could be the key to transforming a startup's vision into a life-saving reality, instead of a medical mishap waiting to happen.
Example of Market Research working
Innovaccer, founded by Abhinav Shashank in 2014, focuses on improving healthcare delivery through data-driven insights and interoperability solutions. Before launching their platform, Innovaccer conducted extensive market research to understand the challenges faced by healthcare organizations and the potential for innovation in healthcare IT.
Identifying Pain Points: Innovaccer surveyed healthcare providers to understand their difficulties with data integration, care coordination, and patient engagement. They found widespread frustration with siloed systems and inefficient workflows.
Competitive Analysis: Analyzed competitors offering similar solutions in healthcare analytics and interoperability. Identified gaps in comprehensive data aggregation, real-time analytics, and actionable insights.
Regulatory Compliance: Ensured their platform complied with HIPAA and other healthcare data privacy regulations. This compliance was crucial to gaining trust from healthcare providers wary of data security issues.
Customer Validation: Conducted pilot programs with several healthcare organizations to validate the platform's effectiveness in improving care outcomes and operational efficiency. Gathered feedback to refine features and user interface.
Digital Health in India_Health Informatics Trained Manpower _DrDevTaneja_15.0...DrDevTaneja1
Digital India will need a big trained army of Health Informatics educated & trained manpower in India.
Presently, generalist IT manpower does most of the work in the healthcare industry in India. Academic Health Informatics education is not readily available at school & health university level or IT education institutions in India.
We look into the evolution of health informatics and its applications in the healthcare industry.
HIMMS TIGER resources are available to assist Health Informatics education.
Indian Health universities, IT Education institutions, and the healthcare industry must proactively collaborate to start health informatics courses on a big scale. An advocacy push from various stakeholders is also needed for this goal.
Health informatics has huge employment potential and provides a big business opportunity for the healthcare industry. A big pool of trained health informatics manpower can lead to product & service innovations on a global scale in India.
NURSING MANAGEMENT OF PATIENT WITH EMPHYSEMA .PPTblessyjannu21
Prepared by Prof. BLESSY THOMAS, VICE PRINCIPAL, FNCON, SPN.
Emphysema is a disease condition of respiratory system.
Emphysema is an abnormal permanent enlargement of the air spaces distal to terminal bronchioles, accompanied by destruction of their walls and without obvious fibrosis.
Emphysema of lung is defined as hyper inflation of the lung ais spaces due to obstruction of non respiratory bronchioles as due to loss of elasticity of alveoli.
It is a type of chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease.
It is a progressive disease of lungs.
English Drug and Alcohol Commissioners June 2024.pptxMatSouthwell1
Presentation made by Mat Southwell to the Harm Reduction Working Group of the English Drug and Alcohol Commissioners. Discuss stimulants, OAMT, NSP coverage and community-led approach to DCRs. Focussing on active drug user perspectives and interests
Enhancing Hip and Knee Arthroplasty Precision with Preoperative CT and MRI Im...Pristyn Care Reviews
Precision becomes a byword, most especially in such procedures as hip and knee arthroplasty. The success of these surgeries is not just dependent on the skill and experience of the surgeons but is extremely dependent on preoperative planning. Recognizing this important need, Pristyn Care commits itself to the integration of advanced imaging technologies like CT (Computed Tomography) and MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) into the surgical planning process.
Test bank clinical nursing skills a concept based approach 4e pearson educati...rightmanforbloodline
Test bank clinical nursing skills a concept based approach 4e pearson education
Test bank clinical nursing skills a concept based approach 4e pearson education
Test bank clinical nursing skills a concept based approach 4e pearson education
Management of Post Operative Pain: to make doctors conscious about the benefi...
Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response, Delta State Report
1.
2. Zonal Health Facility
MPDSR committee
State MPDSR Desk Officer
MPDSR Technical subcommittee
MPDSR Steering Committee
HCH
3. COMPOSITION OF THE DELTA STATE MPDSR STEERING
COMMITTEE
1.Chairman – Obstetrician/Gynaecologist
2.Co-chairman – Paediatrician
3.Secretary – State Reproductive Health Supervisor
4.Desk Officer
5.Permanent Secretary of the State Ministry of Health
6.Permanent Secretary Hospital Management Board
7.Executive Director Primary Health Care Development
Agency
8.Representative of the Governor’s Wife
9.Director PHC, Local Government Service Commission
10.Director Nursing Services, Local Government Service
Commission
11.Directors of the State Ministry of Health
12.Directors of the State Primary Health Care
Development Agency
13.Representative of NBA
14.State DSNO
15.State HMIS Officer
16.Chief Nursing Officer (HMB)
17.Chief Medical Records officer (HMB)
18.Chief Medical Laboratory officer (SMOH)
19.State Epidemiologist
20.Representative of NISONM
21.Representative of AGPMP
22.Representative of NCWS
23.Representative of the Department of Vital Statistics,
NPoC
24.State Coordinator, WHO
25.UNICEF Health Specialist.
26.State Programme Coordinator, The Challenge
Initiative
4. STATE DATA
2017 2018
TOTAL MATERNAL DEATHS REPORTED 63 64
TOTAL PERINATAL DEATHS REPORTED 1,104 918
TOTAL LIVE BIRTHS 27,487 24,216
MATERNAL MORTALITY RATIO (per 100,000 live births) 229 264
PERINATAL MORTALITY RATE (per 1,000 live births) 40 38
10. INTERVENTIONS IDENTIFIED FOR IMPLEMENTATION -
RESPONSE
1. Development of a maternal case selection guide for various tiers of health
facilities and appropriate referral.
2. State blood transfusion services.
3. The state emergency ambulances services was resuscitated
4. Strengthening the contributory health scheme for emergency care for
unbooked mothers.
5. Increased involvement of Consultants in the management of pregnant
mothers and neonates in the health facilities.
11. Challenges
1. Relunctance of health care workers to embrace MPDSR
2. Poor and incomplete filling of the MPDSR forms.
3. Infrequent review meetings and funding
4. Improperly conducted MPDSR reviews
5. Implementation and Tracking of response.
6. Inability to commence MPDSR reviews at the PHCs/LGA level.
12. NEXT STEPS
1. Passage of the MPDSR draft bil
2. Strengthening MPDSR reviews in secondary and tertiary health
facilities in Delta State.
3. Implementation of MPDSR reviews at the PHCs/LGA level.
4. Strengthening linkage systems between MPDSR and HMIS
5. Implementation of the electronic MPDSR Data platform.
6. Development of strategies for the incorporation of Private
healthcare providers into the MPDSR programme.
13. CONCLUSION
• A lot more stiil needs to be done if Delta State is to achieve the SDG
3.1 of MMR of 70/100,000 by the year 2030
• Deligent implementation of the MPDSR is crucial to achieving this
• I plead earnestly for the presentation and passage of the MPDSR bill
• I also plead earnestly with all stakeholders, Health care workers,
implementation partners, the ministry of Health and Government to
continue and increase their support for MPDSR
• We must continue to prevent the deaths of our pregnant mothers
and newborn