Coping mechanisms and strategies adopted to improve the quality and timeliness of immunization data among lower-level private-for-profit service providers in Kampala Capital City, Uganda
Eric Ssegujja, Martha Akulume, Elizabeth Ekirapa-Kiracho, Paul Kiggundu, Sarah Karen Zalwango, Elizeus Rutebemberwa

TL;DR
This study explores how private health providers in Uganda improve immunization data quality and timeliness through various coping strategies.
Contribution
It identifies specific coping mechanisms used by private-for-profit health workers to address data quality challenges in urban immunization programs.
Findings
Coping strategies include peer-to-peer learning and experiential training for data management.
Registration modifications and VHT engagement help improve data tracking and completeness.
Chronic barriers like high staff turnover limit the effectiveness of these strategies.
Abstract
Lower-level urban private-for-profit health service providers are actively engaged in the delivery of immunization services. However, not much is known about their everyday endeavours to improve data quality and ensure the submitted data meets the quality and timeliness requirements as per established guidelines. The objective of this paper was to examine the coping mechanisms and strategies adopted to improve the quality and timeliness of immunization data among lower-level private-for-profit service providers in Kampala Capital City, Uganda. A qualitative study design was adopted with in-depth interviews (n = 17) and key informant interviews (n = 8) completed among frontline health workers, district health managers and immunization implementing partners. Analysis followed a thematic approach with coding conducted using Atlas. ti, a qualitative data management software. Overall,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · Influenza Virus Research Studies
