The Pan African Medical Journal (Apr 2015)

Human resource capacity for information management in selected public healthcare facilities in Meru County, Kenya

  • Elizabeth Mueke Kiilu,
  • Dominic Charles Okero,
  • Lillian Muiruri,
  • Pacific Akinyi Owuondo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2015.20.334.6052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 334

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: reliable health information is essential for decision making in the healthcare system. Information management in Kenya was considered the weakest area under the Health Information System pillar mainly due to inadequate health workers capacity. The study therefore aimed at assessing health workers skills and current training needs for information management in the selected healthcare facilities. METHODS: cross-section research design was adopted and both purposive sampling technique and censuses were used to establish the study participants. Analysis was done using SPSS version 20 and results were presented in tables, charts and graphs. RESULTS: it was established that capacity building was usually undertaken through on-job trainings i.e. 85.1% (103) health workers had on-job training on filling of data collection tools and only 10% (13) had received formal classroom training on the same. Further, only 9.1% (11) health workers had received information management training while 90.9% (110) had not received such training. Health workers demonstrated below average skills on information management i.e. only 17.4% (21) could check for data accuracy, only 16.5% (20) could compute trends from bar charts and only 16.5% (20) could transform the data they collected into meaningful information for use.

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