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Compendium of Indicators for Monitoring and Evaluating National Tuberculosis Programs.

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Presentation on theme: "Compendium of Indicators for Monitoring and Evaluating National Tuberculosis Programs."— Presentation transcript:

1 Compendium of Indicators for Monitoring and Evaluating National Tuberculosis Programs

2 What is the Compendium? A comprehensive and standardized collection of the most widely used and recommended indicators for monitoring and evaluation of National TB Programs.

3 Who is it for? NTP managers, data managers, regional and district officers NGO program managers/data managers involved in TB programming Evaluation specialists Health-system planners (HMIS, etc.)  Anyone with responsibility for collecting, processing, analyzing, and presenting data on tuberculosis programs.

4 Specific Objectives Standardize M&E terminology across indicators and programs Encourage consistent use of indicators to monitor and evaluate programs Provide guidance for the development of comprehensive evaluation plans Serve as a resource for the different components of the monitoring and evaluation process

5 Why a new TB M&E Guide? (1) Patient follow-up/case management using WHO standardized forms Need for program data to guide M&E Small number of indicators focusing on outcomes of DOTS implementation Project-specific monitoring forms Periodic assessment visits at facility level

6 Why a new TB M&E Guide? (2) New Global Initiatives Global Fund for AIDS, TB, and Malaria STOP TB Partnership Increased USAID involvement TB/HIV initiatives DOTS Plus

7 INPUT Policy environment Human and Financial Resources Infrastructure PROCESS Management Training Drug management Laboratories Communication Advocacy OUTPUT Diagnostic services Treatment services Improved knowledge, attitudes, and practices Reduced stigma OUTCOME Case detection Treatment success IMPACT Prevalence of TB infection Prevalence of TB disease TB morbidity TB mortality M&E Framework for TB programs p7, Compendium of Indicators for Monitoring and Evaluating National Tuberculosis Programs USAID, MEASURE, CDC, WHO, IUATLD, KNCV, MSH. WHO/HTM/TB/2004.344, August 2004

8 Expansion of M&E activities Framework links inputs, processes to outputs, outcomes, impact Standardized indicators for global use Program-based to complement case management Program-specific indicators for different settings, types of programs

9 International M&E Guidance Provide most useful indicators for monitoring and evaluating TB control programs Encourage use of standardized definitions of indicators and terminology across programs, countries and donor agencies Provide measures of process and output linked to program activities Promote process and impact evaluation of TB control programs

10 INPUT Policy environment Human and Financial Resources Infrastructure PROCESS Management Training Drug management Laboratories Communication Advocacy OUTPUT Diagnostic services Treatment services Improved knowledge, attitudes, and practices Reduced stigma OUTCOME Case detection Treatment success IMPACT Prevalence of TB infection Prevalence of TB disease TB morbidity TB mortality M&E Framework for TB Programs p7, Compendium of Indicators for Monitoring and Evaluating National Tuberculosis Programs USAID, MEASURE, CDC, WHO, IUATLD, KNCV, MSH. WHO/HTM/TB/2004.344, August 2004

11 Compendium Development Step 1: Assessment of existing M&E systems within national TB programs and MOH Step 2: Create an international TB M&E working group to develop and review indicators Step 3: Field test indicators in selected countries Step 4: Build capacity in M&E to collect, disseminate, and use information

12 Step 1: Assessment of current M&E systems Field visits to examine M&E systems: data collection forms, reporting, supervision, data use South Africa, Russia, Honduras, Philippines Met with NTPs, USAID missions, WHO, CDC, local implementing partners Review of literature on TB indicators

13 Results from assessment visits Substantial amount of data collected at facility level that is not reported Weakness in reporting mechanisms for facility level data Few indicators on political commitment, IEC activities, drug supply and TB/HIV Lack of data from private sector physicians

14 Step 2: Creation of an international working group Similar goals to develop more informative indicators on program implementation Bring expertise from a wide variety of sources: Stop TB, WHO, UNION, KNCV, CDC, USAID, World Bank, MSH, MEASURE/Evaluation

15 Results of TB M&E Working Group Indicators for DOTS: measure key aspects of the TB epidemic in a country and the programmatic response Based on WHO recommendations and collected through existing systems External and Expert review

16 Step 3: Field testing Peru, Kazakhstan, Haiti, and Thailand Revision of indicators based on field-testing results Step 4: Building capacity Egypt (March), Mexico (this workshop), Cambodia (June), Sub-Saharan Africa (June) Technical assistance

17 Indicators (1) Global indicators (5) –Case detection –Treatment success –DOTS coverage –HIV seroprevalence among TB cases –Surveillance of MDR-TB Routinely reported program outcomes –Case detection (6) –Smear conversion –Treatment outcome

18 Indicators (3) Process indicators to measure DOTS implementation under expanded framework: –Political commitment (12) NTP annual work plan and budget –Diagnosis (7) Existence of comprehensive laboratory network –Case management, including DOT (2) Proportion of patients with correct prescription –Drug management (8) Existence of a quality assurance system for drug management

19 Indicators (3) Process indicators to measure DOTS implementation under expanded framework: –Recording & reporting (2) Accuracy of reports sent to NTP –Supervision (2) Existence of supervision guidelines –Human resources development (3) Proportion of health centers with at least one professional trained in the DOTS strategy –Health systems (1) Equitable distribution of DOTS

20 Conclusion Introduction to the Compendium – overview and background Next – How to use the Compendium


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