Journal Design Emerald Editorial
African Food Systems Research (Interdisciplinary - incl Agri/Env) | 07 August 2002

A Randomised Field Trial of Efficiency Gains in Ethiopian District Hospital Systems

A Methodological Evaluation
A, b, e, b, e, T, a, d, e, s, s, e, ,, M, e, k, o, n, n, e, n, H, a, i, l, u, ,, S, e, l, a, m, a, w, i, t, G, e, b, r, e
Randomised TrialHealth SystemsOperational EfficiencyMethodology
Cluster-randomised trial across 24 Ethiopian district hospitals assessed a lean management intervention.
Key methodological challenge was controlling contamination between hospital clusters.
Effect heterogeneity observed, with larger gains in hospitals with electronic records.
Hierarchical linear modelling with cluster-robust errors provided analytical robustness.

Abstract

{ "background": "District hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa face severe resource constraints, yet rigorous, field-based evaluations of systemic efficiency interventions are scarce. Existing studies often rely on observational data, limiting causal inference about operational improvements.", "purpose and objectives": "This case study aims to methodologically evaluate the implementation of a randomised field trial designed to measure efficiency gains from a lean management intervention in district hospital systems. The primary objective is to assess the trial's design, execution, and analytical robustness.", "methodology": "We conducted a methodological evaluation of a cluster-randomised controlled trial across 24 district hospitals. The core efficiency outcome, patient throughput time, was modelled using a hierarchical linear model: $Y{ij} = \\beta0 + \\beta1 Tj + \\gamma X{ij} + uj + \\epsilon{ij}$, where $i$ indexes patients, $j$ hospitals, $Tj$ is the treatment assignment, and $u_j$ are cluster random effects. Inference was based on cluster-robust standard errors.", "findings": "The trial successfully demonstrated a significant reduction in median patient throughput time in intervention hospitals (15.2% decrease, 95% CI: 8.7% to 21.5%). Methodologically, key challenges included contamination control between clusters and the accurate daily capture of time-motion data. The intervention's effect was heterogeneous, with larger gains observed in hospitals with pre-existing electronic record systems.", "conclusion": "Randomised field trials are methodologically feasible for evaluating health systems efficiency interventions in resource-limited settings, but require meticulous design to address contextual complexities like inter-facility communication and data infrastructure variability.", "recommendations": "Future health systems trials should incorporate pre-trial process mapping to identify contamination risks and invest in simple, robust data capture tools tailored to local workflows. Analytical plans must pre-specify tests for heterogeneity of treatment effects.", "key words": "health systems research, operational efficiency, cluster randomised trial, lean management, implementation science