The role of emergent champions in policy implementation for decentralised drug-resistant tuberculosis care in South Africa

Author:

Le Roux Sacha RoxanneORCID,Jassat Waasila,Dickson Lindy,Mitrani LeilaORCID,Cox Helen,Mlisana Koleka,Black John,Loveday Marian,Grant Alison D,Moshabela MosaORCID,Kielmann KarinaORCID,Nicol Mark P

Abstract

ObjectiveChampions are recognised as important to driving organisational change in healthcare quality improvement initiatives in high-income settings. In low-income and middle-income countries with a high disease burden and constrained human resources, their role is highly relevant yet understudied. Within a broader study on policy implementation for decentralised drug-resistant tuberculosis care in South Africa, we characterised the role, strategies and organisational context of emergent policy champions.DesignInterviews with 34 healthcare workers in three South African provinces identified the presence of individuals who had a strong influence on driving policy implementation forward. Additional interviews were conducted with 13 participants who were either identified as champions in phase II or were healthcare workers in facilities in which the champions operated. Thematic analyses using a socio-ecological framework further explored their strategies and the factors enabling or obstructing their agency.ResultsAll champions occupied senior managerial posts and were accorded legitimacy and authority by their communities. ‘Disease-centred’ champions had a high level of clinical expertise and placed emphasis on clinical governance and clinical outcomes, while ‘patient-centred’ champions promoted pathways of care that would optimise patients’ recovery while minimising disruption in other spheres of their lives. Both types of champions displayed high levels of resourcefulness and flexibility to adapt strategies to the resource-constrained organisational context.ConclusionPolicymakers can learn from champions’ experiences regarding barriers and enablers to implementation to adapt policy. Research is needed to understand what factors can promote the sustainability of champion-led policy implementation, and to explore best management practices to support their initiatives.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference17 articles.

1. World Health Organisation . Global TB Report [Internet], 2018. Who p. 277. Available from:. Available: https://www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/en/

2. Tuberculosis control in South Africa: Successes, challenges and recommendations

3. National department of health South Africa. multi-drug resistant tuberculosis: a policy framework on decentralised and deinstitutionalised management for South Africa. Pretoria 2011.

4. Cox HS , Dickson-Hall L , Jassat W . Drug-Resistant tuberculosis in South Africa: history, progress and opportunities for achieving universal access to diagnosis and effective treatment. South African Health Review 2017 2017:157–67.

5. Soo SD . The role of champions in the implementation of patient safety practice change by the role of champions in the implementation of patient safety practice change. University of Toronto, 2010.

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