Abstract
{ "background": "District hospitals are critical nodes in sub-Saharan African health systems, yet robust longitudinal evidence on the impact of systemic interventions on clinical outcomes remains scarce. Existing evaluations often lack rigorous counterfactuals, limiting causal inference.", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to quantify the causal effect of a multi-component hospital systems strengthening initiative on key clinical outcomes across a national network of district-level facilities. The primary objective is to estimate the intervention's impact on facility-level inpatient mortality.", "methodology": "A longitudinal quasi-experimental design utilising difference-in-differences with staggered adoption was employed. A panel dataset was constructed from routine health management information systems and independent clinical audits for all district hospitals over a 26-year period. The core statistical model is $Y{it} = \\alphai + \\lambdat + \\beta (Intervention{it}) + \\gamma X{it} + \\epsilon{it}$, where $Y_{it}$ is the outcome for hospital $i$ in period $t$. Inference is based on cluster-robust standard errors at the hospital level.", "findings": "Preliminary analysis of the first 18 years of data indicates a statistically significant reduction in risk-adjusted inpatient mortality associated with the intervention. The estimated coefficient $\\beta$ corresponds to a relative reduction of approximately 8.2% (95% CI: 3.1% to 13.1%) in the primary outcome following full implementation.", "conclusion": "The systems strengthening initiative demonstrates a measurable, positive effect on clinical outcomes at the district hospital level. The quasi-experimental design provides credible evidence of causality, addressing a key methodological gap in health systems research.", "recommendations": "Policy should prioritise integrated systems strengthening over single-component reforms. Future research should apply similar longitudinal quasi-experimental methods to evaluate scalability and cost-effectiveness across different contexts.", "key words": "health systems evaluation, quasi-experimental design, difference-in-differences, hospital mortality, sub-Saharan Africa, longitudinal data",