Background and Aims: Dementia is becoming a major global public health menace in the aging population affecting 47 million people globally. Dementia has no cure and effective interventions. Treatment of dementia is a big problem. The most common symptomatic medications for cognition, behavior, and global functioning among patients with dementia currently are cholinesterase inhibitors and memantine. However, Information on the effectiveness of cholinesterase inhibitors for dementia is conflicting and controversial. Thus, this makes it difficult for decision-makers, healthcare providers, patients, and caregivers to decide on the most effective intervention. The current metaanalysis sought to investigate the efficacy of pharmacologic interventions to improve cognitive and behavioral symptoms in people with living dementia.Methods: This current systematic review and meta-analysis used the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses to ensure accuracy and comprehensiveness. The Cochrane MEDLINE, Database of Systematic Reviews, and other databases were thoroughly searched for relevant studies. We selected Studies such as randomized controlled trials published in English with a sample size of at least 20 subjects. We selected and applied the random-effects meta-analysis as the most preferred model because of the heterogeneity across studies. The computation of the weighted effect size was based on the result from the test of heterogeneity.Results: Twenty-two studies were finally used in the meta-analysis. The study subjects who received donepezil 5 mg/day, donepezil 10 mg/day, and galantamine 24 mg/day had improved cognition symptoms (ADAS-cog) score of −1.46 (95%
Background: Immunization has been an important public health intervention for preventing and reducing child morbidity and mortality over the years and coverage has increased in the past decades. However, the validity of the data from immunization coverages is usually disputed. Immunization data from health facilities show poor concordance between tallied registers and monthly reports as they are reported to higher levels of the health system. The study assessed the quality of data from routine immunization of some health facilities in the Ho central municipality in the Volta region of Ghana.Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was used to review routine immunization data in tallied registers and reports submitted to the Municipal Health Directorate (MHD) from January to December, 2015. Simple random sampling was used to select three health facilities in Ho central municipality. The World Health Organization (WHO) Data Quality Self-assessment (DQS) tool was the main instrument used to present and analyze data for accuracy and discrepancy level between the tallied registers and reports. A template was created in Microsoft excel which automatically presented accuracy and discrepancy levels when data was entered. Ethical approval for the study was obtained from Ghana Health Service Ethics Review Committee. Results: The result showed discrepancies between recounted tallies at the facilities and reports submitted to the MHD. Accuracy ratios of 102%, 64% and 94% for Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG), Pentavalent (Penta) vaccine dose 3 and Measles 2 respectively indicating underreporting for BCG and over reporting for the rest were obtained. There was 460 over reported data to the municipal level representing accuracy ratio of 80% and discrepancy level of 20%. Conclusions: Immunization data was characterized by underreporting and overreporting, hence not accurate and lacked quality. Immunization data quality should be a priority among health staff at health facilities.
Background: According to research, Information Communication Technology (ICT) adoption is linked to increased productivity and economic growth. The benefits of using Information Technology (IT) in the health field are well-known and can help in the promotion of; patient-centered care, care quality, and education of health workers and patients. Despite this, IT implementation is complicated and requires changes at multiple levels, including patients, healthcare practitioners, and healthcare organizations. Hence, this study seeks to examine the level of knowledge and use of ICT among healthcare practitioners' in delivering healthcare. Materials and Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study design was used with a structured questionnaire administered to 198 participants. Data was entered into Epi-data version 4.0, cleaned before being exported to Stata version 17 for analysis. Frequency tables were used to display the background characteristics. Cross tabulation was also done to determine the association between Knowledge, socio-demographic, utilization of information and barriers to use of ICT in healthcare delivery. Findings: Overall, 126 (63.6%) were women. Majority of the respondents (56.1%) had good knowledge about ICT, a great portion of the respondents (69.7%) had utilized ICT and the top four usage of internet by the respondents were, for research, for social media, access to news and for mailing in the proportions of 33.1%, 25.3%, 21.8% and 19.8 respectively. Conclusion: Even though a great portion of healthcare providers in Ketu South Municipality preferred using ICT tools in working we discovered knowledge and usage gaps. Therefore, we recommend health workers be frequently trained on how to effectively use computers in healthcare delivery in order to successfully integrate ICT into our healthcare system.
Background: Immunization has been an important public health intervention for preventing and reducing child morbidity and mortality over the years and coverage has increased in the past decades. However, the validity of the data from immunization coverages is usually disputed. Immunization data from health facilities show poor concordance between tallied registers and monthly reports as they are reported to higher levels of the health system. The study assessed the quality of data from routine immunization of some health facilities in the Ho central municipality in the Volta region of Ghana.Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was used to review routine immunization data in tallied registers and reports submitted to the Municipal Health Directorate (MHD) from January to December, 2015. Simple random sampling was used to select three health facilities in Ho central municipality. The World Health Organization (WHO) Data Quality Self-assessment (DQS) tool was the main instrument used to present and analyze data for accuracy and discrepancy level between the tallied registers and reports. A template was created in Microsoft excel which automatically presented accuracy and discrepancy levels when data was entered. Ethical approval for the study was obtained from Ghana Health Service Ethics Review Committee. Results: The result showed discrepancies between recounted tallies at the facilities and reports submitted to the MHD. Accuracy ratios of 102%, 64% and 94% for Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG), Pentavalent (Penta) vaccine dose 3 and Measles 2 respectively indicating underreporting for BCG and over reporting for the rest were obtained. There was 460 over reported data to the municipal level representing accuracy ratio of 80% and discrepancy level of 20%. Conclusions: Immunization data was characterized by underreporting and overreporting, hence not accurate and lacked quality. Immunization data quality should be a priority among health staff at health facilities.
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