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Improvement in rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease management and prevention using a health centre-based continuous quality improvement approach.
[acute rheumatic fever]
Rheumatic
heart
disease
(
RHD
)
remains
a
major
health
concern
for
Aboriginal
Australians
.
A
key
component
of
RHD
control
is
prevention
of
recurrent
acute
rheumatic
fever
(
ARF
)
using
long
-term
secondary
prophylaxis
with
intramuscular
benzathine
penicillin
(
BPG
)
.
This
is
the
most
important
and
cost-effective
step
in
RHD
control
.
However
,
there
are
significant
challenges
to
effective
implementation
of
secondary
prophylaxis
programs
.
This
project
aimed
to
increase
understanding
and
improve
quality
of
RHD
care
through
development
and
implementation
of
a
continuous
quality
improvement
(
CQI
)
strategy
.
We
used
a
CQI
strategy
to
promote
implementation
of
national
best-practice
ARF
/
RHD
management
guidelines
at
primary
health
care
level
in
Indigenous
communities
of
the
Northern
Territory
(
NT
)
,
Australia
,
2008
-
2010
.
Participatory
action
research
methods
were
employed
to
identify
system
barriers
to
delivery
of
high
quality
care
.
This
entailed
facilitated
discussion
with
primary
care
staff
aided
by
a
system
assessment
tool
(
SAT
)
.
Participants
were
encouraged
to
develop
and
implement
strategies
to
overcome
identified
barriers
,
including
better
record-keeping
,
triage
systems
and
strategies
for
patient
follow-up
.
To
assess
performance
,
clinical
records
were
audited
at
baseline
,
then
annually
for
two
years
.
Key
performance
indicators
included
proportion
of
people
receiving
adequate
secondary
prophylaxis
(
≥
80
%
of
scheduled
4
-
weekly
penicillin
injections
)
and
quality
of
documentation
.
Six
health
centres
participated
,
servicing
approximately
154
people
with
ARF
/
RHD
.
Improvements
occurred
in
indicators
of
service
delivery
including
proportion
of
people
receiving
≥
40
%
of
their
scheduled
BPG
(
increasing
from
81
/
116
[
70
%
]
at
baseline
to
84
/
103
[
82
%
]
in
year
three
,
p
 
=
 
0
.
04
)
,
proportion
of
people
reviewed
by
a
doctor
within
the
past
two
years
(
112
/
154
[
73
%
]
and
134
/
156
[
86
%
]
,
p
 
=
 
0
.
003
)
,
and
proportion
of
people
who
received
influenza
vaccination
(
57
/
154
[
37
%
]
to
86
/
156
[
55
%
]
,
p
 
=
 
0
.
001
)
.
However
,
the
proportion
receiving
≥
80
%
of
scheduled
BPG
did
not
change
.
Documentation
in
medical
files
improved
:
ARF
episode
documentation
increased
from
31
/
55
(
56
%
)
to
50
/
62
(
81
%
)
(
p
 
=
 
0
.
004
)
,
and
RHD
risk
category
documentation
from
87
/
154
(
56
%
)
to
103
/
145
(
76
%
)
(
p
 
<
 
0
.
001
)
.
Large
differences
in
performance
were
noted
between
health
centres
,
reflected
to
some
extent
in
SAT
scores
.
A
CQI
process
using
a
systems
approach
and
participatory
action
research
methodology
can
significantly
improve
delivery
of
ARF
/
RHD
care
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"fever"
symptom
22q11.2 deletion syndrome
acute rheumatic fever
alexander disease
allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis
canavan disease
carcinoma of the gallbladder
child syndrome
congenital toxoplasmosis
cushing syndrome
cystinuria
dracunculiasis
erdheim-chester disease
esophageal adenocarcinoma
esophageal carcinoma
familial mediterranean fever
focal myositis
hodgkin lymphoma, classical
lamellar ichthyosis
legionellosis
locked-in syndrome
malignant atrophic papulosis
neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy
neuralgic amyotrophy
oculocutaneous albinism
papillon-lefèvre syndrome
pyomyositis
pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
scrub typhus
severe combined immunodeficiency
sneddon syndrome
systemic capillary leak syndrome
triple a syndrome
typhoid
waldenström macroglobulinemia
wolf-hirschhorn syndrome
This symptom has already been validated