Document Type
Article
Department
Community Health Sciences
Abstract
Background: In Pakistan, structured guidelines for hospital infection control and prevention are deficient in most public sector facilities. There is dearth of literature available on management of hospital-care acquired infections and related issues. This study aims to understand infection control management as a proxy measure for quality of health care provided at a public sector tertiary care hospital in Karachi, Pakistan. In this study, we identify barriers to implementation of infection control measures and highlight key areas for quality improvement.
Methods: A cross sectional study was carried out in 2008 using qualitative research methods. In-depth interviews were conducted with hospital staff belonging to three different management tiers.
Results: There was lack of a centralized documented infection control policy, structure or management hierarchy in the hospital. The infection control mechanisms were managed at the individual ward level depending upon the interest of the individual Head of the Department. Lack of well-defined systems for human resource and financial management, resource allocation, documentation, communication, monitoring and evaluation for infection control further augmented the problem.
Conclusion: Based on the results of this study, it is evident that quality infection control mechanisms must be organized and controlled at the hospital level not at the individual ward level. Human resource recruitment and training, budgetary allocation and designing of communication channels specific to infection control are needed at this tertiary care hospital. This is the first study to understand the management perspective for hospital infection control using 7S McKinsey framework of management in the largest tertiary care public sector hospital in Sindh.
Publication (Name of Journal)
Pakistan Journal of Public Health
Recommended Citation
Perveen, S.,
Habib, S. S.
(2017). Identifying constraints for hospital infection control management via mckinsey 7s framework in Pakistan. Pakistan Journal of Public Health, 7(4), 213-222.
Available at:
https://ecommons.aku.edu/pakistan_fhs_mc_chs_chs/945
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License