Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022

Abstract Background The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) indicators are essential in monitoring neonatal healthcare coverage and quality. The District Health Information System (DHIS2), an open-source platform in over 80 countries, supports health data collection and analysis, enabling progress trac...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Josephine Shabani, Nahya Salim, Christine Bohne, Louise Tina Day, Claud Kumalija, Ahmad Mohamed Makuwani, Felix Bundala, Habib Ismail, Joy E. Lawn, Eric O. Ohuma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-025-05417-x
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832585393081417728
author Josephine Shabani
Nahya Salim
Christine Bohne
Louise Tina Day
Claud Kumalija
Ahmad Mohamed Makuwani
Felix Bundala
Habib Ismail
Joy E. Lawn
Eric O. Ohuma
author_facet Josephine Shabani
Nahya Salim
Christine Bohne
Louise Tina Day
Claud Kumalija
Ahmad Mohamed Makuwani
Felix Bundala
Habib Ismail
Joy E. Lawn
Eric O. Ohuma
author_sort Josephine Shabani
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) indicators are essential in monitoring neonatal healthcare coverage and quality. The District Health Information System (DHIS2), an open-source platform in over 80 countries, supports health data collection and analysis, enabling progress tracking at national and subnational levels. This study evaluates the availability and quality of maternal and newborn health indicators, explicitly focusing on ENAP indicators within Tanzania’s DHIS2. Methods Using the EN-MINI tool, we assessed data availability for 20 ENAP indicators by analysing their numerators and denominators in Tanzania’s DHIS2 (2015–2022) across all healthcare levels. World Health Organization’s (WHO) data quality framework was adapted to examine four dimensions: (a) availability of indicators, (b) completeness of indicator reporting, (c) internal consistency of related indicators, and (d) indicator plausibility by comparing DHIS2 data with population-based Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data. Results Of the 20 ENAP indicators, 14 were available in Tanzania’s DHIS2, with definitions, numerators and denominators aligned with WHO standards. Between 2015 and 2022, the number of facilities reporting at least one delivery annually increased by 19% from 5,898 to 7,016. During this period, 75% to 97% of facilities consistently reported data on skilled attendance at birth and early breastfeeding initiation. In contrast, 4% to 54% of facilities reported on maternal and newborn outcomes, including complications such as stillbirths and maternal mortality. Internal consistency was high (> 94%). However, neonatal mortality rates reported in DHIS2 were lower than those reported in Tanzania DHS for similar periods, even after a 20% adjustment to account for home births. Conclusion Tanzania’s DHIS2 captures many ENAP indicators; however, notable variability in data quality persists, with substantial data gaps related to maternal and newborn outcomes and complications. To address these challenges, it is crucial to strengthen routine data review, implement robust quality checks, enhance validation processes, provide targeted training, deliver constructive feedback, and conduct supportive supervision. Placing greater emphasis on using DHIS2 data to monitor progress will help identify gaps and drive improvements in data quality, ultimately supporting better maternal and newborn health outcomes.
format Article
id doaj-art-e9055402bd90458c9a55bff2759282e5
institution Kabale University
issn 1471-2431
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Pediatrics
spelling doaj-art-e9055402bd90458c9a55bff2759282e52025-01-26T12:52:57ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312025-01-0123S211510.1186/s12887-025-05417-xNeonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022Josephine Shabani0Nahya Salim1Christine Bohne2Louise Tina Day3Claud Kumalija4Ahmad Mohamed Makuwani5Felix Bundala6Habib Ismail7Joy E. Lawn8Eric O. Ohuma9Ifakara Health InstituteDepartment of Pediatrics and Child Health, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS)Rice360 Institute for Global Health Technologies, Rice UniversityMaternal, Adolescent, Reproductive, & Child Health Centre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical MedicineMinistry of HealthMinistry of HealthMinistry of HealthMinistry of HealthMaternal, Adolescent, Reproductive, & Child Health Centre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical MedicineMaternal, Adolescent, Reproductive, & Child Health Centre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical MedicineAbstract Background The Every Newborn Action Plan (ENAP) indicators are essential in monitoring neonatal healthcare coverage and quality. The District Health Information System (DHIS2), an open-source platform in over 80 countries, supports health data collection and analysis, enabling progress tracking at national and subnational levels. This study evaluates the availability and quality of maternal and newborn health indicators, explicitly focusing on ENAP indicators within Tanzania’s DHIS2. Methods Using the EN-MINI tool, we assessed data availability for 20 ENAP indicators by analysing their numerators and denominators in Tanzania’s DHIS2 (2015–2022) across all healthcare levels. World Health Organization’s (WHO) data quality framework was adapted to examine four dimensions: (a) availability of indicators, (b) completeness of indicator reporting, (c) internal consistency of related indicators, and (d) indicator plausibility by comparing DHIS2 data with population-based Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data. Results Of the 20 ENAP indicators, 14 were available in Tanzania’s DHIS2, with definitions, numerators and denominators aligned with WHO standards. Between 2015 and 2022, the number of facilities reporting at least one delivery annually increased by 19% from 5,898 to 7,016. During this period, 75% to 97% of facilities consistently reported data on skilled attendance at birth and early breastfeeding initiation. In contrast, 4% to 54% of facilities reported on maternal and newborn outcomes, including complications such as stillbirths and maternal mortality. Internal consistency was high (> 94%). However, neonatal mortality rates reported in DHIS2 were lower than those reported in Tanzania DHS for similar periods, even after a 20% adjustment to account for home births. Conclusion Tanzania’s DHIS2 captures many ENAP indicators; however, notable variability in data quality persists, with substantial data gaps related to maternal and newborn outcomes and complications. To address these challenges, it is crucial to strengthen routine data review, implement robust quality checks, enhance validation processes, provide targeted training, deliver constructive feedback, and conduct supportive supervision. Placing greater emphasis on using DHIS2 data to monitor progress will help identify gaps and drive improvements in data quality, ultimately supporting better maternal and newborn health outcomes.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-025-05417-xNewbornEvery newborn action planLow- and Middle-Income CountriesDistrict Health Information SystemNeonatal mortality rate
spellingShingle Josephine Shabani
Nahya Salim
Christine Bohne
Louise Tina Day
Claud Kumalija
Ahmad Mohamed Makuwani
Felix Bundala
Habib Ismail
Joy E. Lawn
Eric O. Ohuma
Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
BMC Pediatrics
Newborn
Every newborn action plan
Low- and Middle-Income Countries
District Health Information System
Neonatal mortality rate
title Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
title_full Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
title_fullStr Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
title_full_unstemmed Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
title_short Neonatal indicator data in Tanzania District Health Information System: evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators, 2015-2022
title_sort neonatal indicator data in tanzania district health information system evaluation of availability and quality of selected newborn indicators 2015 2022
topic Newborn
Every newborn action plan
Low- and Middle-Income Countries
District Health Information System
Neonatal mortality rate
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-025-05417-x
work_keys_str_mv AT josephineshabani neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT nahyasalim neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT christinebohne neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT louisetinaday neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT claudkumalija neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT ahmadmohamedmakuwani neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT felixbundala neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT habibismail neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT joyelawn neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022
AT ericoohuma neonatalindicatordataintanzaniadistricthealthinformationsystemevaluationofavailabilityandqualityofselectednewbornindicators20152022