HMIS Procedures Manual I II - English-Revised-20110823 (Final)
HMIS Procedures Manual I II - English-Revised-20110823 (Final)
HMIS Procedures Manual I II - English-Revised-20110823 (Final)
National
Health Management
Information System
-
Procedures Manual
Part I & II
March 1122
Hoot 2319
Table of Contents
Foreword .......................................................................................................................4
Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................5
Abbreviations and Acronyms .....................................................................................8
Introduction ............................................................................................................... 01
I. HMIS: Development, Accomplishments and Challenges .............................. 01
I.a. Development of HMIS 3112/0282............................................................ 01
I.b. The early implementation of the HMIS ................................................... 00
I.c. Development of the HMIS 3115/0285 ..................................................... 00
I.d. Development of the HMIS 3100/0201 ..................................................... 00
I.e. Working principles for revising the HMIS .............................................. 03
I.f. Criteria for Health Indicator selection ...................................................... 02
II. Purpose of the Procedures Manual ................................................................ 05
III. Organization of the Procedures Manual ...................................................... 05
Section 0 - Overview of the HMIS ........................................................................... 01
0.0. Definition of HMIS....................................................................................... 01
0.3. The Content of HIS and HMIS ................................................................... 01
0.2. The purpose of the HMIS ............................................................................ 01
0.4. Overview of the HMIS forms ...................................................................... 01
0.4.0. Forms drafted and in use ..................................................................... 01
0.4.3. Areas for future development .............................................................. 01
0.5. The Process of the HMIS (Data Flow) ....................................................... 08
0.1. HMIS functions by health system level ...................................................... 33
0.1.0. Health Post Level .................................................................................. 33
0.1.3. HSC/BHC/CHC Level .......................................................................... 33
0.1.2. Hospital Level ........................................................................................ 32
0.1.4. Provincial Level .................................................................................... 32
0.1.5. National Level ....................................................................................... 34
0.1. Priority diseases, services and interventions ............................................. 35
0.8. Computerization of the HMIS system ........................................................ 38
0.8.0. Definition of terms ................................................................................ 38
0.8.3. Requirements for installing a provincial hub. ................................... 38
0.8.2. PPHO manages a hub (Ideal). ............................................................. 20
0.8.4. PPHO has a replica, but no hub (most common). ............................. 23
0.8.5. PPHO only has an analysis copy (less common) ................................ 22
0.0. Calendar conversions ................................................................................... 24
Section 3 – Detailed description of forms ............................................................... 25
3.0. Notifiable Diseases Summary Report ......................................................... 25
3.3. Health Post Pictorial Tally Sheet ................................................................ 21
3.3.0. Health Post Pictorial Tally Sheet – Guidelines for use ...................... 21
3.3.3. Pictorial Tally Sheet for CHWs - Form .............................................. 43
3.2. Monthly Activity Report – Health Posts (MAR) ....................................... 44
3.2.0. MAR – Guidelines for use .................................................................... 44
3.2.0. MAR – Form ......................................................................................... 40
3.4. Monthly Aggregated Activity Report – Health Posts (MAAR) ............... 51
3.4.0. MAAR – Guidelines for use ................................................................. 51
3.4.3. MAAR – Form ...................................................................................... 55
3.5. OPD Patient Register - Facilities ................................................................ 51
2
3.5.0. OPD Patient Register – Guidelines for use......................................... 51
3.5.3. OPD patient register – Form template ............................................... 11
3.1. Monthly Integrated Activity Tally Sheet – Facilities OPD ...................... 10
3.1.0. MIAR Tally Sheet – Guidelines for use .............................................. 10
3.1.3. MIAR Tally Sheet - Form .................................................................... 18
3.1. Monthly Integrated Activity Report – Facilities OPD (MIAR) ............... 10
3.1.0. MIAR – Guidelines for use .................................................................. 10
3.1.3. MIAR – Form ........................................................................................ 11
3.8. Facility Status Report – MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC (FSR) ............................ 10
3.8.0. FSR – Guidelines for use ...................................................................... 10
3.8.3. FSR – Form ........................................................................................... 84
3.0. Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report (HMIR) ............................................. 81
3.0.0. HMIR – Guidelines for use .................................................................. 81
3.0.3. HMIR - Form ........................................................................................ 05
3.01. Hospital Status Report Form (HSR) ......................................................... 08
3.01.0. HSR – Guidelines for use ................................................................... 08
3.01.3. HSR – Form ...................................................................................... 012
3.00. Catchment Area Annual Census Tally Sheet (CAAC) ......................... 011
3.00.3. CAAC – Guidelines for use............................................................... 011
3.00.2. CAAC - Form.................................................................................... 000
3.03. Catchment Area Annual Census Report – HP (CAACR).................... 001
3.03.3. CAACR - Form ................................................................................. 008
3.02 Catchment Area Annual Census Report Health Facility (CAAC-AR) 000
3.02.3 Catchment Area Annual Census Aggregated Report (CAAC-AR)
............................................................................................................... 031
3.02.4 CAAC Information CHWs and CHSs May Find Useful ................... 030
List of figures
3
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
Ministry of Public Health
_____________________________________________________________________
Foreword
The Ministry of Public Health is pleased to present the most recent revised version of
the National Health Management Information System (HMIS). The initial HMIS was
launched late 2003/2332. It was based on the 2003 version of the Basic Package of
Health Services for Afghanistan (BPHS). A first revision took place in 2001/2332
incorporating changes suggested during an evaluation of the HMIS and the changes
made to the BPHS 2002/2334, and the Essential Package of Hospital Services
2002/2334.
Over the past years, the Afghan HMIS has been mentioned as example in several
international events and has proven to be an extremely useful management tool for the
MoPH and its partners. Maintaining the quality and usefulness of the HMIS requires
regular updating, and the present version takes into account the recent changes in
policies and strategies, in particular the updated BPHS 2020. This new version also
takes into account the feedback of users at local, provincial and national level.
I would like to express my appreciation to the members of the HMIS Task Force, who
oversaw the implementation of the HMIS. The MoPH is also grateful to the many
Afghan and international organizations and individuals who provided assistance and
support in planning, developing, and finalizing the HMIS for Afghanistan over the
past years. We are especially grateful for the sustained technical and financial
assistance of the World Health Organization, Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office
and of the United States Agency for International Development through the Technical
Support to the Central & Provincial Ministry of Public Health (Tech-Serve) Program,
implemented by Management Sciences for Health, which allowed the development,
publication and distribution of the Procedures Manual of the National HMIS.
The MoPH warmly recommends its partners to use the HMIS as an important tool that
will help promote the ongoing development of the health system of Afghanistan for
the benefit of the Afghan people.
4
Acknowledgements
The following individuals contributed to different stages in the development of the National
HMIS:
2
Dr. Ahmad Rashed HSSP NGI SSF Advisor
Dr. Ajabkhan AADA HMIS Officer Ghazni
Dr. Amin BDN HMIS Officer
Dr. Atiqullah Sadaat CHA HMIS Officer
Dr. Aziz-Ur-Rahman BRAC HMIS Officer
Dr. Barezkai PPHO Consultant
Dr. Bashir MoPH GM Mental Health
Dr. Bashirahmad Barikzai Herat Reg. Hospital RH Technical consultant
Dr. Burhanuddin Safi MoPH M&E Officer
Dr. Dawod Azimi GCMU Data Analyst
Dr. Fahima URC Improvement Advisor
Dr. Fahima Malalai Hospital MD Doctor
Dr. Farooq Mojaddidi BASICS DT Leader
Dr. Fazel Rahim CMC IT Specialist
Dr. Ghulam Qader TBCAP M&E Consultant
Dr. Gul Ahmad ACTD Quality Assesment Officer
Dr. Habibulla Rostaqi Takhar Prov Hospital Hospital Director
Dr. Hamed Masoud MoPH CBHC Consultant
Dr. Hamidullah MoPH IMCI Officer
Dr. Hemat MoPH Advisor to Health Promotion
Dr. Ihsan Sahak URC M&E Advisor
Dr. Khaksar UNICEF Child Officer
Dr. Khalil AADA Hospital TM
Dr. Khalil MoPH/RH EmONC officer
Dr. Khesraw HSSP IST Officer
Dr. Lutfurahman Ahmadi HRP HMIS Consultant
Dr. M. Azim Ibn Sina Hospital Doctor
Dr. Mahmood Zia HMIS Manager SAF
Dr. Mahmood Noorzad MoPH HMIS Officer
Dr. Maroof Behzad MOVE Technical Director
Dr. Masood MoPH M&E Consultant
Dr. Mauladad AMI Medical Director
Dr. Mir Atiqullah CHA HMIS Officer Balkh
Dr. Miwais AADA HMIS Officer Bamian
Dr. Mohammad Haroon PPHO PPHD
Dr. Mohib MoPH NHA
Dr. Moqeem Barna RHD\MoPH Consultant
Dr. Muh Haron Harif Sarepul PH Hospital Director
Dr. Mumtaz M&E, MoPH M&E Officer
Dr. Najeeb Health Net TPO PCH Focal Point
Dr. Najeeb HN-TPO HMIS Officer
Dr. Naqeebullah HN-TPO PCH / HMIS Focal Point
1
Dr. Naser Ahmad AADA HMIS Technical Manager
Dr. Naser Ikram URC National Improvement Coordinator
Dr. Neyaz MoPH Consultant
Dr. Nooria MoPH/SM Deputy Project Coordinator
Dr. Popal Sediq MoPH /URC NQI Consultant MoPH
Dr. Raheemullah MoPH M&E Consultant
Dr. Rahim MoPH / HEFD M&E Consultant
Dr. Rasool Gul BRAC Head of HMIS
Dr. Roqia MoPH/EPI National EPI M&E Officer
Dr. Rustaqi HRD Director
Dr. Azizurahman Saboor CHA HMIS Officer
Dr. Samad SCA Technical Officer
Dr. Samiuddin SDO Health Program Manager
Dr. Samiullah MSH Technical Officer
Dr. Sayed Yaqoub Azimi MoPH HMIS Acting Director
Dr. Shafiqullah HN-TPO HMIS Manager
Dr. Shah Agha HN-TPO HMIS Responsible
Dr. Shah wali Mashed HRP-Kabul HRP Technical Consultant
Dr. Shahpoor MRCA Medical Coordinator
Dr. Sharif Sahak CAF HMIS Coordinator
Dr. Soraya Malalai Hospital Hospital Staff
Dr. Zulaikha RBH Doctor
Mohammad Ismail Istiqlal Hospital Medical Record
Mr. Abdul Bahis MoPH Database Support officer
Dr. Nabila UNICEF Health Specialist
Mr. Dawid IMC Medical Coordinator
Mr. Ghulam Haider MoPH DRD MoPH DRD
Mr. Hafizullah Mahmodi MSH MIS Specialist
Mr. Jafar Hussaini MoPH Database Manager
Mr. Jamshid Saberi MoPH HMIS Specialist
Mr. Karim Haidari MoPH HMIS Officer
Mr. Mahmood HSSP MIS / HIS Coordinator
Mr. Mohammad Sadiq MoPH Senior HMIS Specialist
Mr. Raza IMC Technical Officer
Mr. Shakib Osmani MoPH HMIS
Mrs. Najiba Rabia Balkhi Hospital Medical Record
Mrs. Shahnaz Rabia Balkhi Hospital Medical Record
Ms. Benafsha Ehsas MoPH HMIS Officer
Ms. Zarmina Ibn Sina Hospital Medical Record
7
Abbreviations and Acronyms
3
HRD Human Resources Development
HSC Health Sub-Center
HSR Hospital Status Report
ID Identification
IMR Infant Mortality Rate
INH Isoniazide
ITN Insecticide Treated Nets
IUD Intra Uterine Device
Lab Laboratory
LBW Low Birth Weight
MAAR Monthly Aggregated Activity Report
MAR Monthly Activity Report (Health Post)
MD Medical Doctor
MHT Mobile Health Team
MIAR Monthly Integrated Activity Report (outpatients in facilities)
MMR Maternal Mortality Rate
MoPH Ministry of Public Health
MSH Management Sciences for Health
MUAC Mid-Upper Arm Circumference
MW Midwife
NGO Non-Governmental Organization
Ob/gyn Obstetrics and Gynecology
OPD Out-patient Department
ORS Oral Rehydration Salts
Pentavalent vaccine (Diphtheria, Tetanus, Pertussis, Hepatitis B,
PENTA
Hemophilus Influenza b)
PENTA3 Third dose of PENTA
PF Plasmodium Falciparum
PH Provincial Hospital
PPHCC Provincial Public Health Coordination Committee
PPHD Provincial Public Health Director
PPHO Provincial Public Health Office
PNC Post Natal Care
PNV Post Natal Visit
PV Plasmodium Vivax
REACH Rural Expansion of Afghanistan’s Community Health
RH Regional Hospital
RRS Routine Reporting System
SP Sulfadoxine + pyrimethamine
SS Sputum smear (TB diagnosis)
STD Sexually Transmitted Diseases
STG Standard Treatment Guidelines
STI Sexually Transmitted Infections
TB Tuberculosis
Tech-Serve Technical Support to the Central & Provincial Ministry of Public Health
TT Tetanus Toxoid
TT2 Second dose of TT
U2MR Under Five Mortality Rate
UN United Nations
UNFPA United Nations Family Planning A……
UNICEF United Nations Children Emergency Fund
USAID United States Agency for International Development
WB World Bank
WHO World Health Organization
WRA Women of Reproductive Age
9
Introduction
I. HMIS: Development, Accomplishments and Challenges
I.a. Development of HMIS 3112/0282
In March 2003, the MoPH had published its first version of the Basic Package for
Health Services, describing the core of primary health care services that should be
available to all Afghans. Since many of these services were to be implemented
through different contracting mechanisms (Private Partnership Agreements and
performance based grants), the need for a sound information system that would allow
the MoPH to monitor progress of the BPHS implementation by its partners became all
the more urgent.
Like many other parts of the health system, the HIS had suffered greatly over the last
23 years of turmoil. Despite obvious difficulties, efforts were made by the Ministry
of Health and its partners to maintain at least a minimum of information flow. Early
in 2999, a Task Force was formed, resulting in an HIS for outpatient visits that was
implemented starting in March 2000. The Afghanistan National Health Resources
Assessment (ANHRA), conducted in the summer of 2002, found that about 2/3 of all
functioning facilities had copies of the HIS forms available. However, few of the
reports were finding their way to the central HIS unit in the MoH. The data collected
were inconsistently used for action at the local level and focused principally on
reporting disease morbidity rather than on providing data about services and resources
that might be helpful in improving health services management.
The planned rapid expansion of health services under different grants programs to
NGOs called for an HMIS that allowed following the progress of BPHS
implementation. Starting early in 2003, a revived HMIS Task Force collaborated
with various other technical Task Forces to define policies and protocols for
individual interventions. Given that there was no functioning uniform data
aggregation and processing system, the Task Force decided to take the following
approach:
2. Define indicators for each of the components of the BPHS;
2. Review existing data collection and report forms for appropriateness;
3. Draft new reporting forms;
4. Draft new data collection forms.
After review of the data collection tools in use by the various implementers of the
BPHS, the MoPH decided not to impose standard data collection tools for fear of
disrupting what was already working. It did, however, introduce the indicators for
BPHS and developed standard reporting forms containing the minimum information
that needs to be collected, analyzed and reported routinely.
20
I.b. The early implementation of the HMIS
The early implementation of the HMIS was a success: in early 2003, updated
information from about 25 of facilities was readily available at the MoPH; by late
2002, 705 of all facilities targeted for early implementation (about 305 of the total)
were submitting timely routine reports to the MoPH.
User feedback provided insights on the advantages of the HMIS over the previously
used HIS:
2. Forms and definitions are in line with the BPHS
2. Data quality is improved:
a. Clear guidelines for indicator definition and use
b. Data collection limited to what is needed for BPHS
c. Standard tools for tallying
3. Data collection plus transmission procedures are standardized and simple
4. Data presentation and use is promoted
2. Computers are used efficiently at provincial and central levels to facilitate data
analysis and communication
1. Data on health infrastructure, needed to obtain the indicators, can be
maintained
7. Supervision can be readily strengthened and standardized.
In late 2004, the HMIS Task Force evaluated the early implementation of the HMIS,
assessing actual implementation and problems encountered at community, facility and
provincial/NGO level in three provinces, as well as at the national level. In early
2002, evaluation results were used to revise existing forms and guidelines.
Based on recommendations from the users, more detailed guidelines for analysis and
use of data at the local level were developed and tested.
The forms and guidelines were further revised to conform to the BPHS 2002/2334,
and additional indicators, forms and guidelines were developed to allow monitoring
the EPHS 2002/2334 for inpatient care, and the EPHS module was incorporated into
the HMIS database in 2001/2332.
The transmission of electronic data was refined, and protocols were developed to
allow Provincial Public Health Offices to aggregate provincial data from different
NGOs in the province before sending the aggregated data to the MoPH.
By late 2009, regular routine service statistics from more than 305 of all facilities
were available at the central level.
22
A regular revision of the HMIS was scheduled to follow the revision of the BPHS, the
revised version of which became available in July 2020. Supporting the BPHS was
the development of MoPH National Core Indicators. These reflected the core
priorities of the MoPH and are consistent with the evolving implementation strategies
of national programs.
Between July and December 2020, the HMIS Taskforce oversaw an in-depth review
of the BPHS and EPHS HMIS using internationally standardized questionnaires. This
included the analysis of the quality of data collected against selected core indicators, a
review of the organizational, behavioral and individual constraints to the use of data
across all tiers of the health sector and an analysis of the type, frequency and flow of
data and reports required within the health sector and an analysis of the morbidity data
from both the EPHS and BPHS facilities. There was broad stakeholder engagement to
guide the development of the revised HMIS including:
- MoPH directorates and departments through personal interview of key
personnel and workshops;
- PPHO, implementing NGOs, and HF of six provinces through structured
questionnaires and focus group discussions;
- HMIS Taskforce members reviewed and organized results of the above;
- Analysis of a 25 sample of 327733 cases categorized as “Other – Unlisted
diagnosis” out of a total of 927223 outpatient visits during the months of
Saratan and Qaws 2339 in 29 facilities;
- Analysis of 237291 inpatient cases of which 37273 initially classified as “All
other new inpatient cases” during the months of Saratan and Qaws2339 in 3
DH, 3 PH, 2RH and one National Hospital.
A core group designated by the HMIS Taskforce drafted revised forms and
corresponding guidelines, which were reviewed with MoPH, NGOs and selected
PPHO in three workshops during December 2020 – January 2022.
Between September 2020 and March 2022, the different HMIS database modules
were reviewed, normalized, and adapted to the updated forms and reports.
Starting April 2022, the HMIS (2022/2390) was rolled out throughout Afghanistan.
In order to ensure consistency between HMIS revisions, the HMIS taskforce in 2020
applied similar working principles to those used in the initial development of the
HMIS. These principles include:
2. Any data to be recorded at a service level must be able to be used by both the
staff and the community to analyze and improve the provision of health
services within their community.
22
3. Any changes or developments in data recording and reporting should be made
to improve the provision of care at the patient and community level,
particularly for those populations who are most vulnerable and most in need.
2. Efforts should be made to make better use of existing data at all levels through
practical analysis and improved presentation of data.
7. Improvement in health data generation and use at the various service levels
should be undertaken in support of efforts to improve service task
performance and should be seen as a by-product of such performance
improvement. Care should be taken to share information in a non-threatening
way: encouraging improvement and not laying blame.
0. Relevant – The indicators should reflect the national health priorities, policies
and strategies, and in particular the BPHS and EPHS, to ensure usefulness for
decision making across all tiers of the health system.
5. Useful for action at the recording level - The data needed for the indicator is
useful for the person doing the recording (manager, staff, community leader or
patient) and the recorded data contributes to taking necessary action in regard
to the case, family, community or district being served
1. Understandable - The indicator should deal with a single clear idea that
everyone will see as an important measure.
23
8. Ethical - Data collection, including the choice of the data source, computation
of the indicator and its use should not conflict with accepted ethical values and
should conform to MoPH values.
24
II. Purpose of the Procedures Manual
This document provides an overview of the national Health Management Information
System (HMIS) and describes the procedures to be used for data collection,
processing, reporting and use through the MoPH feedback mechanism. This manual
also includes samples of each of the principal reporting formats and provides detailed
instructions for their completion and use. In addition, it contains the priority
indicators selected for monitoring progress in the implementation of the BPHS/EPHS.
Given the dynamic nature of effective information systems, it is important to update
this reference document when information systems procedures change. The major
revisions of this Procedures Manual will follow the regular updates of the
BPHS/EPHS.
Section 2: Provides an overview of the system, identifying and defining the principal
indicators collected by the system whilst describing the general data management
procedures.
Section 2: Provides detailed descriptions of the forms used for data recording,
tallying, and reporting.
Section 3: Which is a supporting manual to the main HMIS procedures manual
describes how to represent and analyze the data, including how to calculate the
BPHS/EPHS indicators. It also provides examples on how to use the information. For
ease of use, section three has been transferred to a separate manual.
22
Section 0 - Overview of the HMIS
0.0. Definition of HMIS
The HMIS is a system based on qualitative and quantitative indicators in which
routine health information is collected, processed, analyzed, interpreted,
disseminated, and used to improve the provision of health services according to the
MoPH’s priorities and ultimately to improve the health of the population. In addition,
the information generated can be used for research and training purposes.
As part of a larger Health Information System (HIS), the HMIS proper mainly
addresses the periodic routine reports, including the data collection tools needed to
compile the reports.
21
development work in their communities;
2. Provide data to provincial MoPH and NGO managers for supervision and
other supportive action;
4. Provide data to provincial and national program staff, and to donors for
planning, monitoring and evaluation.
The previously included Notifiable Disease Report has been transferred to and
incorporated into DEWS.
Standardized registration tools at the facility level (MHT, SHC, BHC, CHC,
Hospitals)
27
Supervisory checklists
2. At the level of Health Posts, male and female CHWs keep a record of activities
and the HSC/BHC/CHC/DH collects monthly summary reports. Pictorial data
recording and reporting forms have been developed, taking into account that many
of the health workers at this level may be functionally illiterate. A standard
Monthly Activity Report (MAR) summarizes the data on the activity in the Health
Post, and is transmitted to the CHC/BHC/DH, where the MARs of all Health
Posts in the catchment area are aggregated into the Monthly Aggregated Activity
Report (MAAR).
The Health Posts, with the cooperation of the CHS of the HSC/BHC/CHC/DH,
will collect data on the communities served by their activities through the
Catchment Area Annual Census (CAAC). This census will help measure progress
towards population-based objectives. The CHS of the HSC/BHC/CHC/DH will
assist the Health Posts in analysis and interpretation of this data.
3. To complete the picture obtained from aggregating the mini-surveys of the Health
Posts, the HSC/BHC/CHC/Hospitals will also collect data on the communities
directly served by their activities through a CAAC.
23
PPHO/NGO before the 7th day of each month. The reports facilitate the use of
data at the facility level.
Provincial
2. Database Analysis
2.
Facility
Staff Indicators
3Database
. Service Statistics Database 2. Monthly
4. Grants Mgt. Database Maintenance PPHD 2. Annual
reports
2. Training Analys is PHCC 3. - hoc reports
reports
Database Ad Hospitals*
2. Monthly
2. Annual
reports 2. Feedback Analysis
3. Reports from
reports 2. Reports/information on
reports
4. Community Survey
Posts 3.
request
2. - hoc reports (staff,etc..)
reports 4. Supervision
Meetings
visits
Ad HFs Facility
Analysis Analysis
HP activity and
facility reports Annual mini -surveys
Health Post
Community
* General OPD of hospital sends reports like BHC/CHC, including health post and community reports
** These facilities can be MOPH facilities or NGO facilities. Additional reporting requirements for NGO
facilities to their respective organizations are not represented
Items listed in italics can be transmitted in electronic format
29
1. Every six months, a Facility Status Report (Hospital Status Report for hospitals)
on health services, infrastructure, equipment, staffing, etc… is compiled by the in-
charge of each facility and sent to the PPHO/NGO. In the present version of the
HMIS, FSR and HSR are reported six-monthly.
7. At the provincial level, reports are received and registered to allow for monitoring
of completeness. A register is kept for this purpose. Health facilities are
contacted for missing reports and errors in the reports. Using the same MIAR
form, individual reports are aggregated by type of facility.
20. At the provincial level, grants data is recorded and quarterly reports are sent to the
central level before the end of the first month of the new quarter.
22. At least once a year, all facility in-charges should meet at the provincial level for
the planning meeting. This meeting should include analysis of data, interpretation
of trends, and prioritization of activities and setting of targets for the next year.
National level indicators, as well as indicators specific for each province, are
monitored and discussed at this level.
22. At the central HMIS Unit, all reports of all provinces are combined in a national
Service Statistics Database. At this level, facility and staff databases are also
maintained, as well as a grants management database. One important function of
the national HMIS Unit is giving unique facility codes and staff codes that
facilitate maintenance of the databases. Facility codes are void of any meaning,
other than being a unique identifier: facility types change, province and district
boundaries change. The HMIS Unit coordinates closely with the HRD to
maintain unique staff ID numbers for all MoPH and NGO health personnel
working in Afghanistan. The HMIS Unit maintains close coordination with the
Human Resources Department, Personnel Management Department, and the
Grants and Contract Management Unit, to ensure unique coding of staff, grants,
etc… and maintain department specific databases that are linked to the HMIS
database.
20
23. Every six months, or at least once a year, reports are sent to each province. Once
a year, a report on the trends of the national level indicators is produced. Other
information material can be produced as well. The HMIS unit prepares material
for the Annual National Health Planning meeting, where PPHD and NGOs from
each province convene. The National meeting will take place after a similar
meeting in each province. Necessary budget for this meeting should be secured at
the national level.
24. Computerization allows the MoPH to ensure that all implementing agencies,
PPHOs and NGOs, have the most recent data available. Whenever NGOs submit
electronic data to the PPHO, they will receive a new analysis copy of the data base
that contains their own data as well as all other data in the province. Whenever
PPHOs submit electronic data to the MoPH, they will receive a new analysis copy
of the data base that contains their own data as well as all other data in the
country. The routine reports included in the analysis database facilitate the
interpretation and use of data at the PPHO and NGO level. The degree and vehicle
of electronic data transmission may vary by province, depending on available
local expertise.
22
0.1. HMIS functions by health system level
0.1.0. Health Post Level
Data collection
Pictorial tally sheet
Annual Census of catchment area population tally-sheet (CAAC)
Data use
Analysis with assistance from HSC/BHC/CHC/DH during
supervisory visits
Planning of activities with assistance from HSC/BHC/CHC/DH
Match performance (MAR) with coverage (CAAC)
Reports
Monthly Activity Report (MAR) with HSC/BHC/CHC/DH
CAAC – Health Post Level Report
Feedback to Community Health Committees
Data Use
MIAR analysis – functioning of facility
MAAR analysis – functioning of community based activities
supervised by the facility
CAAC analysis – cross check between activities and coverage
Facility Status Report analysis – availability & accessibility of
care
Investigation of notifiable diseases (through DEWS) –
containment of epidemics
Supervision of and feedback to Health Posts – improve
performance of community-based activities
Feedback to community health committees
Monthly, quarterly and annual activity planning
Reports
Monthly Integrated Activity Report (MIAR)
Monthly Aggregated Activity Report of Health Posts (MAAR)
Facility Status Report (FSR)
Annual Census Report (CAAC – Facility Level Summary Report)
Notifiable Diseases Report (through DEWS)
22
0.1.2. Hospital Level
Data Collection
Outpatients: see HSC/BHC/CHC level
Inpatients registers and records
Data Use
Outpatients: see HSC/BHC/CHC level
Health Posts: see HSC/BHC/CHC level
HMIR analysis – functioning of inpatient departments
Hospital Status Report analysis – availability & accessibility of
care
Investigation of notifiable diseases (through DEWS) –
containment of epidemics
Feedback to hospital boards
Monthly, quarterly and annual activity planning
Reports
Monthly Integrated Activity Report (MIAR)
Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report (HMIR)
Monthly Aggregated Activity Report of Health Posts (MAAR)
Hospital Status Report (HSR)
Annual Census Report (CAAC – Facility Level Summary Report)
– for the district hospitals
Notifiable Diseases Report (through DEWS)
Data Use
Aggregation and/or computerization of:
- Monthly Integrated Activity Reports
- Hospital Monthly Inpatient Reports
- Monthly Aggregated Activity Reports
- Catchment Area Annual Census
- Facility and hospital status reports
Analysis and feedback to facilities
- Supervision
- 1 monthly or quarterly meetings
- Written feedback reports
Provincial annual planning and progress monitoring
Follow-up on Notifiable Diseases Report (DEWS)
2
Each lead NGO grant/contract performs the same functions as the Provincial Level, in close
collaboration with the PPHO to avoid unnecessary duplication.
23
Reports
Aggregated MIARs
Aggregated HMIRs
Aggregated MAARs
Aggregated CAAC
Staffing changes
Aggregated facility and hospital status reports
Grants report
Notifiable disease reports (through DEWS)
Data Use
Analysis and calculation of national indicators
Feedback to provinces:
- Supervision
- Written reports
- Annual planning meeting
- Information on request
Follow-up on notifiable diseases reports
Reporting
Annual progress report on health status (BPHS indicators)
Health information (e.g., Newsletters)
Standard reports for use by other departments
(HRD/GCMU/PLO)
24
0.1. Priority diseases, services and interventions
The reporting of morbidity is limited to the priority diseases included in the BPHS
and EPHS.
For inpatient reporting, the analysis of 237291 inpatient cases in 3 DH, 3 PH, 2RH
and one National Hospital in the months of Saratan and Qaws of 2339 showed that,
after reclassification, only 295 could be qualified as “Others”. Several existing
categories containing more than 205 of all inpatient cases, were split up. Based the
analysis the in-patient morbidity listing was adapted as follows:
2. Weapon wounded
2. Road traffic accidents
3. Occupational injuries
4. Burns, scalds & frostbite
22
2 Fractures& dislocations
1 Cerebral Concussions
7. Other injuries
3. Cerebro-vascular accidents
9. Ischemic Heart Diseases
20. Other Cardiovascular
22. Meningitis/encephalitis
22. Epilepsy & convulsions
23. Other Neurological
24. Diabetes & related
22. Micronutrient deficiencies
21. Acute abdomen
27. Peptic disorders
23. Other Gastro-intestinal
29. Abdominal Hernia
20. Liver, gall bladder & pancreas
22. Urinary tract infections
22. Other Uro-genital conditions
23. Pelvic Inflammatory disease
24. Dysentery (all types)
22. Diarrhea (except dysentery)
21. Malaria
27. Tuberculosis
23. Typhoid
29. Musculo-skeletal infections
30. Sepsis
32. Other infectious
32. Common Mental Problems
33. Substances abuse
34. Severe Mental Problems
32. Respiratory tract infections
31. ENT
37. Other Respiratory Conditions
33. Eye conditions
39. Skin conditions
40. Obstetric & pregnancy related
42. Gynecological (non pregnant)
42. Neonatal conditions
43. Musculoskeletal
44. Surgical cases (unspecified)
99. All other new inpatient cases
Many more conditions exist; these may be included or replace the ones included at
present in future revisions, reflecting change in priorities of the MoPH over time.
Likewise, the services and interventions that are monitored through the HMIS are
limited to those that focus on the priority target groups and conditions of the BPHS
and EPHS. They are:
21
Family planning
Pre- and Post-natal care
Obstetric care
Neonatal care
Essential drugs and supplies
Immunizations
Laboratory for tuberculosis, malaria and HIV
Tuberculosis case finding and treatment
Community health
Mental health
Surgical interventions
Blood transfusion
27
0.8. Computerization of the HMIS system
The HMIS system allows for data entry into a database routine at different levels
where data gets aggregated. Separate manuals describe in detail the data entry and
analysis procedures 2 , the HMIS database maintenance 3 , and the HMIS database
replication and synchronization process 4 . We limit ourselves here to a general
overview of how data is transmitted.
A short early trial with a web-based data base proved unfeasible in Afghanistan. A
less fancy, but more solid and flexible system that can adapt itself to the different
degrees of computer capacity in the provinces, has been developed.
The HMIS Unit in the MoPH maintains the Master copy of the databases. It assures
the integrity of reference and lookup files, and aggregates the data from NGOs and
PPHOs into one general database. It distributes updated copies of the Master (replicas
and analysis copies) to NGOs and PPHOs to promote analysis and use of data for
action at the provincial and sub-provincial level. The MoPH/HMIS integrates new
data of all replicas into the Master.
Certain terms are used to identify the different copies of the HMIS database that are
used at different levels for different purposes.
Analysis copy: a copy of the Access database and the corresponding Excel report
pivot tables. It does not allow entering new data, but allows analysis of the data it
already contains
Replica: any copy of the database that allows entering of new data and analysis for
synchronization with another replica. Any NGO and/or PPHO that collects data from
20 facilities or more qualifies for a replica. Those having fewer facilities transmit
data manually to the next level.
Synchronization: computerized aggregation of data from different HMIS sources
into the general HMIS database, called the hub.
Hub: a copy of the general HMIS database that aggregates data from several replica
or lower-level hubs. Hubs are located in the HMIS Unit of the MoPH (Master) and in
those provincial offices that qualify for the hardware and maintenance requirements
(Provincial Hub).
Specific requirements exist for a PPHO to obtain an official Provincial Hub of the
HMIS database to allow aggregation of the data of one province (NGOs and MoPH
facilities) into one provincial hub before sending the data on to the MoPH in Kabul. A
formal agreement is signed between the HMIS Unit of the MoPH and the PPHO that
requests a hub of the database. The terms of the agreement are as follows:
2
<Reference of the Manual>
3
<Reference of the Manual>
4
<Reference of the Manual
23
a. Provincial Hub = More than one Replica in the province
2. System Requirements
a. Minimum requirements
i. Laptop (preferred)
ii. Desktop (if no laptop available since desktops make updates
and occasional troubleshooting more difficult)
iii. Accessories
2. Sustainable electricity
2. Stabilizer
3. UPS
iv. 221 MB Ram
v. Processor 2 GHz
vi. CD ROM writer
vii. Available USB port
viii. 2 GB available on Hard Drive at all times
ix. Network Interface Card
x. Must have a C drive (multiple drives are okay, but must have a
C drive)
b. System requirements will be vetted by the MoPH/HMIS before the
PPHO can be considered for receiving a HMIS hub.
3. Software
a. MS Office 2007
b. Anti-virus software
c. WinZip 24 or higher
1. Must assign an HMIS officer who will be dedicated to managing the database.
See attached minimum requirements. If the HMIS Officer changes, the
updated information must be forwarded to their contact at the Customer
Service Team within one week of the change. (See attached contact list)
7. Make the HMIS officer available for initial training in Kabul and periodic
training thereafter as needed. You are encouraged to cross-train your staff to
promote the institutionalization of the skills.
3. Include maintaining and updating the database as part of the job description of
the HMIS officer.
9. Must notify a responsible member of Customer Service Team within two days
at the first sign of trouble with the database. Contact list is attached.
29
20. Non-compliance that causes data corruptions requiring MoPH resources to
correct will be charged accordingly at the discretion of the MoPH/HMIS.
22. In case of non-compliance with any of the above, the Provincial Health Office
will have one month to Failure to comply within one month of observed non-
compliance will void this agreement.
Similar requirements exist for a PPHO or an NGO to obtain a data-entry replica of the
database. The PPHO or NGO should be managing the HMIS reports of at least seven
facilities in order to qualify for a separate data-entry replica.
A data analysis copy allowing running of the routine reports and creation of custom
reports on already entered data can be obtained from the MoPH/HMIS on request.
30
0.8.2. PPHO manages a hub (Ideal).
For this set-up, PPHOs need to qualify for a hub. In March 2001, only 2 PPHOs
qualify.
MOPH
Master
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
PPHO Contracted
Hub In
NGO
Replica
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
Contracted
Out
Health Post Community
Health Posts and Community information (CAAC) arrive at facility level in paper
format. The Facility sends paper reports to the NGO (for contracted-out facilities) or
to the PPHO (for contracted-in facilities). The NGO or the PPHO enters the received
information in a replica. The NGO sends a CD to the PPHO, where the replica is
synchronized and the NGO receives a new replica and analysis copy, both of which
include the most recent data of the NGO along with all data from other NGOs.
32
0.8.4. PPHO has a replica, but no hub (most common).
MOPH
Master
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
PPHO Contracted
Replica In
NGO
Replica
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
Contracted
Out
Health Post
Community
Health Posts and Community information arrive at the facility level in paper format.
The Facility sends paper reports to the NGO (for contracted-out facilities) or to the
PPHO (for contracted-in facilities). The NGO or the PPHO enter the received
information in their respective replica. The NGO and the PPHO send the replica to
the MoPH, where it is synchronized with the Master hub. The PPHO and the NGO
receive a new replica (including an analysis copy), both of which include the most
recent data of the NGO along with all data from other NGOs.
32
0.8.5. PPHO only has an analysis copy (less common)
MOPH
Master
(a)
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
PPHO
Analysis Contracted
In
Copy
(b)
NGO
Replica
BHC/ CHC/
DH/ PH
Contracted
Out
Health Post Community
Health Posts and Community information (CAAC) arrive at facility level in paper
format. The Facility sends paper reports (including aggregated HP reports) to the
NGO (for contracted-out facilities) or to the NGO. The NGO enters the received
information in a replica. The NGO sends the replica to the MoPH, where it is
synchronized with the Master hub. Both the PPHO and the NGO get a new replica
and analysis copy, both of which include the most recent data of the NGO along with
all data from other NGOs. For the PPHO, there are two possibilities:
a. The PPHO sends paper facility reports to the MoPH, where the information is
entered into the database and the PPHO receives a new analysis copy, which
includes the most recent data of the PPHO along with all data from other
NGOs.
b. The PPHO sends paper reports to the lead NGO. The NGO enters the
information in its replica before sending it to the MoPH. The PPHO receives
a new analysis copy, which includes the most recent data of the PPHO along
with all data from other NGOs.
33
0.0. Calendar conversions
Afghanistan uses an adapted Persian Calendar, also called the Shamsi calendar, in
which the new year starts on 22 of March. The dates on the HMIS forms are in the
Shamsi format. Punctual reporting, such as the Notifiable Diseases Report, needs to
be converted to the exact Gregorian date. For routine reporting of monthly or
quarterly aggregates, a conversion is made in which Shamsi months and Gregorian
months are matched. Since each Shamsi month contains about 20 days of one
Gregorian month and 20 days of the next Gregorian month, each Shamsi month is
matched with the Gregorian month of which it contains 20 days. Figure 2. shows the
conversion for monthly and quarterly reports between Gregorian and Shamsi
calendars.
Month Afghan
Gregorian Dari Pashtu Quarter
April Hamal Wray
May Sawr Ghwayay 2
June Jawza Ghbargolay
July Saratan Chingash
August Assad Zmaray 1
September Sunbullah Wazhay
October Mizan Tala
November Aqrab Laram 3
December Qaws Lindey
January Jadi Marghomay
February Dalwa Salwagha 4
March Hut Kab
Figure 5 – Calendar Conversions by month and quarter
34
Section 2 – Detailed description of forms
3.0. Notifiable Diseases Summary Report
The Notifiable Diseases are now reported to through the Disease Early Warning
System (DEWS).
32
3.3. Health Post Pictorial Tally Sheet
3.3.0. Health Post Pictorial Tally Sheet – Guidelines for use
2.2.
0. Purpose of the Form
This pictorial form is used to record information about monthly household visits and
services provided by Community Health Workers (CHWs). Because many CHWs
have limited literacy, this form uses graphic depictions of the services provided by the
CHWs. The Community Health Supervisor (CHS) will ensure correct use fo the
Pictorial Tallysheet during the routine supervisory visits. At least once a day, and if
possible whenever a family visit or patient visit takes place, a tally will be put in the
row corresponding to the running month in the appropriate column(s). If one row is
not enough for one month recording, CHWs can use another row, as many as needed.
If more than one CHW, e.g, one male and one female CHW, are jointly responsible
for the same Health Post catchment area like couple or brother and sister, only one
tally sheet should be filled out for that area to avoid duplication of reporting. If male
and female CHWs are responsible for the same Health Post catchment area, but do not
live together, each complete a separate tally-sheet. At the end of each month, both
tallies are integrated into one MAR with the help of the CHS.
2. Data Sources
The data for this report comes from the CHW activities. It is recommended that the
tally sheet be filled out after each client visit or service provided, or at least at the end
of each day.
4. Who prepares
Each CHW fills out the pictorial tally sheet. One form is used for each HP catchment
area each month. If necessary, the CHS will assist the CHW to fill out the pictorial
tally sheets during monthly visits. If necessary, general information can be filled out
in advance by the CHS.
5. Definitions
This form is the key data collection instrument to collect most of the data required to
calculate the indicators for the HMIS for the village level.
A tally marks can be put as simple traits: │││and for ease of counting totals, group
tallies by fives, as shown: ││││ . The following way of tallying can also be used:
Definitions of all of the BPHS indicators and the data required to calculate them are
included in Annexes 2 and 2. Only some indicators make sense at individual
community level service delivery points.
31
1. Instructions
This form has a total of 29 pictorial entries pertaining to maternal and child health. It
is used by CHWs to tally the information from their individual villages/catchment
areas.
Sheet (0)
General information
Facility Code and Name: Write the MoPH code number and name of the facility
supervising the CHW
CHW Code and name: Write the code number and name of the CHW
Month and Year: write the month number for which the data is being reported (in
most cases, this will be the previous month) and the 4 digit Afghan Shamsi year for
which the data is being reported.
Family Visit: Put a tally mark each time a family visited the
CHW or was visited by the CHW this month, irrespective of the
number of family members being visited in each single time.
One family visiting several times is marked each time, e.g., a
Family Visit
woman visiting for contraception is one tally, a child of the
same family visiting on another time is another tally. Note that
one family visit can have several entries under each service.
Reproductive health
2. Pill: Put a tally mark for each cycle of pills given to the
client (women/family) by the CHW this month.
37
4. Antenatal Visit (ANV): Put a tally mark for each
pregnant woman who was attended by CHW for ANV
during this month irrespective of round of ANV visits. At
least one of the following interventions by a CHW will be
considered as ANV: a) screening and orienting on the 2
major complications (see CHW manual), b) supplying
Ferr+Folic if applicable, c) counseling Balanced Diet, d)
Birth Plan. This does not include those ANC attended by
HFs or referred by the CHW to HFs for ANC.
0. Children referred for EPI: Put a tally mark for each child under the age
of 2 year referred for EPI vaccination with any of the EPI antigens (BCG,
PENTA, polio or measles) during this month. This includes children
referred for routine vaccination at facilities, during outreach activities or
during campaigns, when they take place.
2
CAH Strategy
33
01. Women referred for TT: Put a tally mark for each woman
referred for a Tetanus Toxoid injection (TT2, TT2, TT3 or any
otherTT injection) during this month. This includes women referred
for vaccination at facilities, during outreach activities or during
campaigns, when they take place.
Sheet (3)
Facility Code and Name: Write the MoPH code number and name of the facility
supervising the CHW
CHW Code and name: Write the code number and name of the CHW
Month and Year: Write the month number for which the data is being reported (in
most cases, this will be the previous month) and the 4 digit Afghan Shamsi year for
which the data is being reported.
0. Child screened with MUAC: Put a tally mark for each < 2 child
screened for MUAC by the CHW during the month. A child can only be
tallied once in each month. If the same child comes back for screening
in the same month, do not tally that child again.
3. Referred: Put a tally mark for each child referred to a facility for
malnutrition treatment during the month.
ARI
39
Acute Diarrhea
Malaria
01. Number Weighed: Put a tally mark for each child of <2 years old
being weighed during each weighing session this month.
00. Number Gained Weight: Put a tally mark for each child of <2
years old who is being weighed and adequately gained weight this
month.
40
Mortality at home/community
02. Under 5 Death at Home: Put a tally mark for each child
that died at home before the age of 2 of any cause. DO NOT
put a tally if the child died in a health facility or a hospital.
Neonatal death at home should be tallied here and also in the
next cell.
1. Submission Guidelines
The CHW prepares the CHW pictorial tally sheet for the village/catchment area and
gives it to his/her supervisor, who reviews and corrects the sheet with the CHW for
missing data and other anomalies. Where the CHW needs assistance to fill out the
tally sheet, the supervisor will fill out the tally sheet jointly with the CHW. The CHS
copies the totals for each entry and summarizes the data on the MAR for the health
post (see instructions for the MAR) for upward submission. The supervisor retains
the tally sheet in chronological order among his/her records.
42
3.3.3. Pictorial Tally Sheet for CHWs - Form
CHW Pictorial Tallysheet Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan / Ministry of Public Health
Facility ID and Name: Health Post Code and Name CHW Code and Name:
TT EPI TB Referred PNV at home Delivery Normal ANV at Family Planning Family Visit
Referred Referred Complications Deliveries home Injection Condom Pill
Referred Referred
Year
Month
42
Neonatal <2 Death Maternal <2 Growth Monitoring < 5 case management
Death at at Home Death at
Home Home Suspected Acute Diarrhea ARI Referred Screened
Malaria with
MUAC
Month
Year
# Gained # Weighed # Weighing
Weight session
43
3.2. Monthly Activity Report – Health Posts (MAR)
3.2.0. MAR – Guidelines for use
This reporting form has been designed to consolidate into one document most of the data
about health services provided by one Health Post (CHWs). This form is compiled by the
CHS from the CHWs’ pictorial tally sheets.
A. Family Planning
B. Maternal Health
C. Nutrition
C2. Acute Malnutrition
C2. Growth Monitoring and Promotion
D. Communicable diseases
E. Under Five Morbidity and Mortality
F. Stock-out Essential Drugs
G. Community Health
H. Report Transmitted
I. Report Received/Aggregated
J. Comments
2. Data Sources
The data for this report comes from the following sources:
2. CHW Activity Tally Sheets
2. CHW Stock Tally Sheets, where available, or from the CHW’s memory if no Stock
Tally Sheets are present
5. Definitions
This form is the key data collection instrument to collect most of the data required to
calculate the indicators for the HMIS for the Health Post level.
Definitions of the indicators and the data required to calculate them are included in Annex 2
and 2.
1. Instructions
This form has a total of 20 sections (A to J). It is used to collect information from individual
Health Posts
44
General information
Province Code & Name: Write the province code and name
District Code & Name: Write the district code and name
Facility Name: Write the full name of the health facility supervising the CHW, followed by
“HSC”, “BHC” , “CHC”, or “DH”
Facility code: Write the ID code assigned by the MoPH to this facility
Month: Write the month number (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported (in
most cases, this will be the previous month)
Year: Write the 4 digit year (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported.
Code & Name of Health Post: Write the name and code number of the health post.
Total Number of Family Visited: total number of families that visited or were visited by
the CHW this month. This is taken from the monthly tally sheet “Family Visit”.
A. Family Planning
A0. # Units by Method
For each method listed, record from the tally sheet the total number units distributed this
month.
B. Maternal Health
C. Nutrition
C0. Acute Malnutrition
From the activity tally sheet, record the number of children under 2 years of age whose
MUAC was taken that month. Transfer these numbers into the following boxes.
0. # Children Screened with MUAC : all children checked for malnutrition during the
month using the MUAC
3. ## children referred due to Nutrition problem: number of children who were
referred to a facility for suspected nutrition problems
42
pictorial tallysheet
3. # Number of children weighed: the number of children that were weighed
2. # Number with adequate weight gain: the number of children that adequately gained
weight
D. Communicable diseases
0. Referred for EPI (<0): Number of children under the age of one referred for vaccination
with any of the EPI antigens. This includes referral for routine immunization at facilities, as
well as rounding up for outreach immunization and campaigns.
3. Women referred for TT: Number of women referred for TT vaccination. This includes
referral for routine immunization at facilities, as well as rounding up for outreach
immunization and campaigns.
2. Patients referred for TB: Number of suspected TB patients referred for diagnosis.
0. ARI: Number of children treated and referred for acute respiratory infections by the
CHW. This includes children with pneumonia.
3. Acute diarrhea: Number of children treated and referred for acute diarrhea by the
CHW. This includes both non-dehydrated and dehydrated children.
2. Malaria: Number of children treated and referred for suspected malaria by the CHW.
4. Died at home: Write the number of children <2 that died at home from illness or
accidents under “treated”.
F0. Mark the presence of the drug in the last month: Go through the stock tally sheet (and
check the shelves where drugs may be kept for day to day distribution) and place a cross
() in the box to the left of any of the following indicator drugs which were not present for
one day or more during the month. Situations in which a couple of tablets remain but not a
number sufficient to serve one patient (child) should also be considered as a stock out of an
essential drug. If the drug was present every single day of the month, a tick-off () should
be placed in the box to the left of the name of the drug:
= during the last month, this drug was not present one day or more
= during the last month this drug was present every single day
41
Although the stock position of all drugs should be monitored regularly, the following is the
list of essential drugs for which stock-outs should be reported monthly:
2. Chloroquine
2. Cotrimoxazole
3. Oral contraceptive
4. ORS
2. Zinc tablets
1. Vitamin A
F3. Comments about stock situation: Use this space to note any special drug stock
problems – this could include overstocks, under-stocks or expiring drugs that have been
destroyed. Also the reason for stock outs cited by the CHW can be put here.
G. Community Health
No. of community meetings with Health Committee: the number of meetings of the
community health committee organized or assisted by the CHW. This can be obtained from a
special log, where it exists, or by asking the CHW.
Number of FHAG active: the number FHAG (not number of FHAG members) that is active
in the catchment area of the health post. Active here refers to a group of women who are
selected by CHW and have taken the FHAG official training and started reporting to their
supervisor.
H. Report Submitted
This section should be completed to trace the submission of the report. The boxes should be
filled by the supervisor who prepared the report.
Name: Enter the name of the supervisor who prepared the report,
Designation: Enter the designation of the person submitting the report.
Signature: Sign the report.
Date Submitted: Write the date that the completed report was submitted.
I. Report received/aggregated
Date Received: The in-charge at the facility level who receives the report of the individual
Health Post should note the date that the report was received.
Date aggregated: The person at the facility level who completes the aggregation of the data
of all the Health Posts of the facility should enter the date on which this report was
aggregated into the MAAR.
J. Comments
Use this space to note special activities or problems in the community during the reporting
period or to explain significant trends or anomalies in morbidity or service delivery.
Continue on the back of the form if required. This is an important mechanism to
communicate important issues between supervisor and CHW and to explain variations of
health problems and service trends. Before going on a supervisory visit, the CHS should
check the most recent MAR of the concerned health post to be aware of any special
problems.
1. Submission Guidelines:
The individual reports are to be prepared by the CHS supervising the CHWs and transmitted
to the in-charge of the facility. The in-charge of the facility must review the reports for
47
missing data and other anomalies and note any comments about important trends or problems
in the catchment area. The in-charge of the facility makes sure that the reports from all
Health Posts linked to his/her facility are aggregated into the MAAR (see instructions for
MAAR), checked for completeness, and contain comments on important trends or problems.
A copy of each individual MAR should be kept in a chronological file within the facility for
future reference during supervision. The MAAR should be dispatched to the PPHD within 7
days of the end of each month, along with the MIAR (see also next chapter).
43
3.2.0. MAR – Form
Monthly Activity Report - Health Post Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
MAR Ministry of Public Health
District Code & Name Province Code & Name
Year Month Facility Code Facility Name
Code & Name of Health Post
Total Number of Family Visited
B. Maternal Health A. Family Planning
2. # of Normal deliveries Refereed by CHW # of units A2. Methods distributed
2. Number of Obstetric complications referred 2. Oral Pills (cycle)
3. Number of maternal death 2. Condoms (dozen)
4. Number of neonatal deaths 3. Injectables (injection)
2. ANV at home
1. PNV at home
C2.Nutrition Growth Monitoring & Promotion C2.Nutrition Acute Malnutrition
2. Number of Weighing Sessions 2. # Children Screened with MUAC
2. Number of children Weighed 2. # children Referred for malnutrition
3. Number with adequate weight gain
E. <2 Morbidity and Mortality D. Communicable diseases
Referred Treated Health Problem 0. Referred For EPI (<0y)
2. ARI 3. Women Referred for TT
2. Acute diarrhea 2. Referred for TB
3. Malaria
99. Died at home
F. Status of Stock of Essential Drugs
F2. Put “” for presence and “X” for absence of the drug in the last month
4. ORS 2. Chloroquine
2. Zinc tablets 2. Cotrimoxazole
1. Vitamin A 3. Oral Contraceptive
F2. Comments about stock
G. Community Health
0. Number of meetings with Health Committee
3. Number of FHAG active
I. Report Received/Aggregated By H. Report Transmitted By
Date received Name
Date aggregated Designation
Date
J. Comments
Any special activities or problems, significant anomalies or trends in morbidity and service delivery
49
3.4. Monthly Aggregated Activity Report – Health Posts
(MAAR)
A. Family Planning
B. Maternal Health
C. Nutrition
C2. Acute malnutrition
C2. Growth Monitoring and Promotion (GMP)
D. Childhood Immunization
E. Under Five Morbidity and Mortality
F. Stock-out Essential Drugs
G. Community Health
H. Report Transmitted
I. Report Received/Aggregated
J. Comments
2. Data Sources
The data for this report comes from the MAR of the health posts of that HSC/BHC/CHC/DH.
5. Definitions
This form is the key data collection instrument used to collect most of the data needed to
calculate HMIS community level indicators for the catchment area of the
HSC/BHC/CHC/DH.
Definitions of all indicators and the data required to calculate them are included in Annex 2
and 2.
1. Instructions
This form has a total of 20 sections (A to J). It is used to aggregate information from
individual Health Posts at the facility level. If many MARs need to be aggregated into one
MAAR, one can use a copy of MAAR as a draft tally sheet before filling out the MAAR that
will be forwarded as report.
20
General information
Province Code & Name: Write the province code and name
District Code & Name: Write the district code and name
Facility Name: Write the full name of the health facility that is supervising and reporting,
followed by “HSC”, “BHC”, “CHC”, or “DH”
Facility code: Write the facility ID code assigned by the MoPH to this facility
Month: Write the month number (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported (eg.
The previous month)
Year: Write the 4 digit year (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported.
Total number of health posts: Write the total number of Health Posts that submitted a
MAR (even the ones that did not report on all sections/activities)
Total number of families visited: Write the total number of families visited by the CHWs
this month (sum of the totals on the individual MARs).
A. Family Planning
# HP Write the number of Health Posts that reported on Family Planning activities this
month (when not all Health Posts deliver Family Planning services, this number may differ
from the total number of health posts that have submitted a MAR,). This number is sum of all
MARs that reported a number in this section, including if that number is zero. Blanks are not
counted. In the table below, the #HP equals 2, since 2 reported. Health Post 3 left the cells in
the MAR blank, and is thus not counted
0. Normal deliveries Referred by CHW : Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
3. Obstetric complications referred: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
2. Number of Maternal deaths: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
4. Number of Neonatal deaths: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
5. ANV at home: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
22
1. PNV at home: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
C. Nutrition
Add up the number of children under 2 years of age whose MUAC was taken each month, as
reported on the MARs. Transfer the totals into the following boxes.
0. Total ## Children screened with MUAC : Sum of the numbers in the individual
MARs
3. Number of referred: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
D. Communicable diseases
# HP Write the number of posts that reported on Communicable diseases this month (when
not all CHWs are participating in immunization activities, this number may differ from the
total number of health posts that have submitted a MAR,) This number is sum of all MARs
that reported a number in this section, even if that number is zero. Blanks are not counted.
0. Referred For EPI (<0y) : Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
3. Women Referred for TT: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
2. Referred for TB: Sum of the numbers in the individual MARs
For each Priority Health Problem write the sum of the numbers treated and referred, as
recorded on the individual MARs. For the Deaths of children under 2, write the total in the
column “Treated”.
22
# HP Write the number of posts that reported on Status of Stock of Essential Drugs this
month (when not all CHWs have drugs or reported on stock, this number may differ from the
total number of health posts that have submitted a MAR.) This number is sum of all MARs
that reported a number in this section, even if that number is zero. Blanks are not counted
Then, for each of the listed drugs, write the sum of the number of ticked off boxes () for
each drug in the individual MARs
Example:
Health Post Vitamin A Zinc tablets ORS Oral Contraceptive Cotrimoxazole Chloroquine
Health Post 0
Health Post 3
Health Post 2
Health Post 4
Health Post 5
Health Post 1
Table 3: Reporting Presence of Medicine in MAAR
2. # HP is 2, since five HPs out of total 1 active health posts have reported drug status
either presence or absence
2. Put the number of health posts reporting the presence of drugs next to each drug, in
the example Vit-A 3, Zinc 2, ORS 2, Cotri. 2 and Chloroquine 2.
F3. Comments about stock situation: Use this space to note any special drug stock
problems – this could include overstocks, under-stocks or expiring drugs that have been
destroyed. If the space provided is too small, add a separate page.
G. Community Health
# HP Write the number of posts that reported on Community Health activities this month
(when not all CHWs engaged in community activities, this number may differ from the total
number of health posts that have a MAR,) This number is sum of all MARs that reported a
number in this section, even if that number is zero. Blanks are not counted.
0. Number of meetings with Health Committee: Sum the numbers in the individual MARs
3. Number of FHAG active: Sum the numbers in the individual MARs
H. Report Submitted
This section should be completed to trace the submission of the report. The boxes should be
filled by the health worker in charge of the facility that prepared the report.
Name: Enter the name of the health worker who was in charge of the facility at the time the
report was submitted,
Designation: Enter the designation of the person submitting the report.
Signature: Sign the report.
Date Submitted: Write the date that the completed report was submitted (i.e., mailed or
dispatched by courier).
23
I. Report received/aggregated
Date Received: The in-charge at the provincial level who receives the report should note the
date that the report was received.
Date aggregated: The person at the provincial level who completes the aggregation or entry
of data into the computer should enter the date on which the report was aggregated /entered.
J. Comments
Use this space to note special activities or problems in the communities during the reporting
period or to explain significant variations, trends or anomalies in morbidity or service
delivery by the Health Posts. Continue on the back of the form if required. This is an
important mechanism to communicate significant issues to the PPHO and to explain
variations of health problems and service trends.
7. Submission Guidelines:
The in-charge of the facility must review the reports of individual Health Posts for missing
data and other anomalies and note any comments about important trends or problems in the
catchment area. The in-charge of the facility makes sure that the reports from all Health
Posts linked to his/her facility are aggregated, checked for completeness, include comments
on important trends or problems and that a copy of the MAAR is dispatched to the PPHO
within 7 days of the end of each month, along with the MIAR of the facility. A copy of each
report should be kept in a chronological file within the facility.
24
3.4.3. MAAR – Form
Monthly Aggregated Activity Report - Health Post Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
MAAR Ministry of Public Health
District Code & Name Province Code & Name
Year Month Facility Code Facility Name
Number of Health Post Submitted MAR
Total Number of Family Visited
/ B. Maternal Health
:#HP :#HP / A. Family Planning
2. # of Normal deliveries Refered by CHW # of units A2. Units distributed
2. Number of Obstetric complications referred 2. Oral Pills (cycle)
3. Number of maternal death 2. Condoms (dozen)
4. Number of neonatal deaths 3. Injectables (injection)
2. ANV at home
1. PNV at home
:#HP / C2.Nutrition GMP :#HP / C2.Nutrition Acute Malnutrition
2. Number of Weighing Sessions 2. # Children Screen with MUAC
2. Number of children Weighed 2. # children Referred for malnutrition
3. Number with adequate weight gain
:#HP / E2. <2 Morbidity and Mortality :#HP / D. Communicable diseases
Referred Treated Health Problem 0. Referred For EPI (<0y)
2. ARI 3. Women Referred for TT
2. Acute diarrhea 2. Referred for TB
3. Malaria
99. Died at home
:#HP / F. Status of Stock of Essential Drugs
F2. Put number in front of each drug for number of HPs that reported presence of the drug in the last month
4. ORS 2. Chloroquine
2. Zinc tablets 2. Cotrimoxazole
1. Vitamin A 3. Oral Contraceptive
F2. Comments about stock
22
3.5. OPD Patient Register - Facilities
3.5.0. OPD Patient Register – Guidelines for use
/CHC OPD Register (R-1)
0. Purpose of the Form
This recording form will assist health workers to record outpatient visits in MHTs, SHCs,
BHCs, CHCs, hospital OPD and Hospital emergency rooms and to maintain data about the
number and types of cases. It may also help staff maintain a visit history for individual cases.
To date, no standard format has been decided upon. Different kinds of registration books are
being used throughout the country. The presence of various stakeholders in the health sector,
each with different needs, currently makes it impractical to impose one standard format.
Therefore, at present, the form described below is based on minimal requirements as defined
by the HMIS Task Force. Facilities already successfully using a different form can continue
using that form on the condition that it captures the minimal data required.
2. Data Sources
The data for this report comes from the health workers’ consultations with patients and their
caretakers.
5. Definitions
New case OPD morbidity: a patient in a health facility is diagnosed with an episode of an
illness for the first time. Many health problems may be of short duration and can thus be
recorded as a new case the next time a patient comes with the same diagnosis. Some
problems, however, last longer-- in some instances, a lifetime. Table 3 in Annex 3, gives the
time that should elapse before a patient presenting with the same disease can be considered a
“new case.”
21
Referred in: A patient who has been referred to this facility by a CHW or another facility.
A patient can be referred for a particular reason and also be seen for something else, e.g., a
child referred to the facility for acute watery diarrhea and also checked for nutrition status
will be tallied as “Referred in” in the row labeled “Patients”, for “Diarrhea, Acute Watery”,
and will be tallied as “New” under the Nutrition Status.
Referred out: A patient who has been referred to another facility for services which are not
available in this HF.
Family planning new case: For family planning, this corresponds with a “new user” in FP
terminology. A “new case” for FP is:
A client who had never used a family planning method before and starts using one,
regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also marked
“new” in the Patient/Clients;
A client who discontinued (see below) a method and starts a new one, or re-starts the
same one, regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also
marked “new” in the Patient/Clients.
Are not considered “new case”, but considered “Re-attendance” under Family Planning:
A client who came to this facility for one method and switches to another method without
“discontinuation” as defined below in “Family Planning Discontinued”, is marked as a
“Re-attendance” for the new method. Remark that this client of course abandons the first
method, but she/he switches to the new method without interrupting the contraceptive
protection. This client is marked as “re-attendance” under Patients/Clients as well.
Also, a user who is using a method, but went previously to another facility for supplies, is
considered “re-attendance” when she/he comes to another facility for renewal, without
discontinuing FP. This client is marked as “new” under Patients/Clients.
Family planning discontinued: a client is considered to have discontinued using the family
planning methods listed in the table below according to the boxed criteria:
Pills Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Pill users are given an appointment to come
back for a check-up and a new stock of pill cycles. If the user
does not come back on the date of the appointment, or within
30 days after the date of that appointment, she is considered
“discontinued” for oral contraception.
Injectables Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Injectable contraception users are given an
appointment to come back for check-up and a new injection.
If the user does not come back on the date of the appointment,
or within 30 days after the date of that appointment, she is
considered “discontinued” for injectable contraception.
IUD When an IUD is removed or ejected and no other method is
accepted.
Condom Did not come back for the last scheduled appointment.
Condom users are given an appointment to come back for new
supply of condoms. If the user does not come back on the date
of the appointment, or stops using condoms without starting
another method, she/he is considered “discontinued” for
contraception for condoms.
27
Family planning re-attendance: a user who comes for a new supply of the same family
planning method or one who comes for the initial supply of another method without having
discontinued (see above) the previous method, regardless of the fact that she/he received the
previous supply at this particular clinic.
1. Instructions
SN: If this is the first client in the day, write the next available annual serial number. If this
is the first patient of the year, start with number 2. Use a line for each case and each patient.
For example, if a mother comes for family planning and skin infection and brings a long a
young child who is seen for cough, you will have to make two entries for mother for her two
cases and one entry for child.
Referred In: Tick if the patient was referred to the facility by a Health Post or another
facility.
Health Problem/Diagnosis: This column should contain a brief description of the health
problem that brought the patient to the health facility. If the patient presents with multiple
health problems, note the diagnosis that motivated the patient to seek care. You should try to
be brief with your description so that it fits within the box provided. If the patient comes for
more than one complaint, you may, if necessary, continue your entry on the following row.
Disease Code: If the Health Problem/Diagnosis is a new case of one of the priority
diseases, write the corresponding code number. Standard case definitions of the priority
illnesses are given in Annex 3. Enter 99 for health problems that are not listed as priority
health problems. Leave blank for nutrition, maternal and neonatal care visits.
Treatment/Advice: Record a brief note about the therapy provided, drugs prescribed or
other action taken to solve the patient’s health problem. Record 3 key drugs given, even those
prescribed from bazaar.
Referred to: If the patient requires care or examinations unavailable in the health facility,
note the name of the facility to which he or she has been referred.
23
At the end of each month
Draw a line under the last entry of the month. Under the line, write “Monthly Total <month
name>” in the “SN” and “Name” columns. Enter the following in the respective columns on
the row below:
SN: subtract the last SN of the previous month from the last SN of this month
Cases Type/New: sum of all new cases of this month
Cases Type/Old: sum of all old cases of this month
Referred In: sum of all cases that have a tick in this column
Referred To: sum of all cases that have a tick in this column
Fill out the monthly tally sheet.
29
3.5.3. OPD register – Form template
Referred to Treatment/ Disease Health Case Type Referred Sex Age Address Name SN
Advice Code problem/ from
diagnosis Y/M/D
Old New
- ORS 4 Diarrhea/ no CHW M 3Y Boyna Qara Abdul Ali 2
blood
- Chloroquine 22 Malaria - F 2Y Qurbaka Khana Miriam 2
10
3.1. Monthly Integrated Activity Tally Sheet – Facilities OPD
3.1.0. MIAR Tally Sheet – Guidelines for use
A. OPD Morbidity
B. Children Checked for Nutrition Status
C. Maternal and Neonatal Care
2. Data Sources
In facilities where registers are kept, the data tallied on this sheet is collected from existing
registers such as the OPD Register, Nutrition Surveillance Register/Child Clinic Register, the
Antenatal Care Register, the Maternity Register, and the Family Planning Register. This tally
sheet can be filled out using the existing MoPH register under the condition that the column
“Referred In” be added to the register (see Recommended Content for Registers).
If no register is in use, the tally sheet should be filled out at the end of each patient visit.
4. Who prepares
Where registers are used, staff responsible for the register of different services tallies the data
related to their own activities (e.g., the ANM for maternity care and ANC services).
Where no registers are used, staff seeing patients will tally at the end of each patient visit.
5. Definitions
This form is the key data collection instrument used to tally most data required on the
facility’s Monthly Integrated Activity Report.
New case OPD morbidity: a patient in a health facility is diagnosed with an episode of an
illness for the first time. Many health problems may be of short duration and can thus be
recorded as a new case the next time a patient comes with the same diagnosis. Some
problems, however, last longer-- in some instances, a lifetime. Figure 3 in Annex 3 gives the
time that should elapse before a patient presenting with the same disease can be considered a
“new case.”
12
Referred in: a patient who has been referred to this facility by a CHW or another facility. A
patient can be referred for a particular reason and also be seen for something else, e.g., a child
referred to the facility for acute watery diarrhea and also checked for nutrition status will be
tallied as “Referred in” in the row labeled “Patients”, for “Diarrhea, Acute Watery”, and will
be tallied as “New” under the Nutrition Status.
Referred out: a patient who has been referred to another facility for services which are not
available in this HF.
Family planning new case: For family planning, this corresponds with a “new user” in FP
terminology. A “new case” for FP is:
A client who had never used a family planning method before and starts using one,
regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also marked
“new” in the Patient/Clients;
A client who discontinued (see below) a method and starts a new one, or re-starts the
same one, regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also
marked “new” in the Patient/Clients.
Are not considered “new case”, but considered “Re-attendance” under Family Planning:
A client who came to this facility for one method and switches to another method without
“discontinuation” as defined below in “Family Planning Discontinued”, is marked as a
“Re-attendance” for the new method. Remark that this client of course abandons the first
method, but she/he switches to the new method without interrupting the contraceptive
protection. This client is marked as “re-attendance” under Patients/Clients as well.
Also, a user who is using a method, but went previously to another facility for supplies, is
considered “re-attendance” when she/he comes to another facility for renewal, without
discontinuing FP. This client is marked as “new” under Patients/Clients.
Family planning discontinued: a client is considered to have discontinued using the family
planning methods listed in the table below according to the boxed criteria:
Pills Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Pill users are given an appointment to come back for a
check-up and a new stock of pill cycles. If the user does not come
back on the date of the appointment, or within 30 days after the date of
that appointment, she is considered “discontinued” for oral
contraception.
Injectables Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Injectable contraception users are given an appointment
to come back for check-up and a new injection. If the user does not
come back on the date of the appointment, or within 30 days after the
date of that appointment, she is considered “discontinued” for
injectable contraception.
IUD When an IUD is removed or ejected and no other method is accepted.
Condom Did not come back for the last scheduled appointment. Condom users
are given an appointment to come back for new supply of condoms. If
the user does not come back on the date of the appointment, or stops
using condoms without starting another method, she/he is considered
“discontinued” for contraception for condoms.
12
Family planning re-attendance: a user who comes for a new supply of the same family
planning method or one who comes for the initial supply of another method without having
discontinued (see above) the previous method, regardless of the fact that she/he received the
previous supply at this particular clinic.
IMPORTANT: If a patient is considered “new” for any reason, (s)he should be counted as
“new” in the row “Patients,”e.g., a woman who comes for a postnatal follow-up visit (re-
attendance in “Postnatal visit”) and starts using Injectable contraceptives (“New Cases” in
“Injectable”), is considered “new” in the row “Patients”.
1. Instructions
General information
Province name & code: Write the name and the Geocode of the province where the facility
is located. Use official reference lists to find the name and Geocode.
District name & code: Write the name and the Geocode of the district where the facility is
located. Use official reference lists to find the name and Geocode.
Facility Name: Write the name commonly used to designate this facility
Facility Code: Write the ID code the MoPH assigned for this facility
Year: Write the 4 digit year (Afghan Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported.
Month: Write the month number (Afghan Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being
reported (usually this will be the month prior to the current month)
Patients/Clients: put a tally mark in the appropriate column for each patient that visits. This
includes OPD/Morbidity, Nutrition status, Maternal and Neonatal care, dressing, and
Immunization sections both in the facility or in the community as out-reach activity. A
Patient/Client is tallied as “new” if (s)he is considered “new” for any reason. Some examples:
a person comes for a re-supply of condoms but also for a new complaint, such as a
respiratory infection, this person qualifies as a “new” Patients/Clients, a “new” ARI, and
a “re-attendance” for condoms;
a person who comes for a re-supply of condoms and also for further treatment of a
respiratory infection for which (s)he had been seen four days ago is tallied as “re-
attendance” under Patients/Clients, “re-attendance” under ARI, and “re-attendance” under
condoms;
a 1 weeks old child brought for a first injection of PENTA is tallied in the age group 0-22
months for PENTA, and also tallied as “new” for Patients/Clients;
a 24 weeks child coming for a third injection of PENTA is tallied in the age group 0-22
months for PENTA and also as “re-attendance” for Patients/Clients;
a patient comes for follow-up sputum slides after starting TB treatment, (s)he will be
tallied under the respective Laboratory Exams, but also as “re-attendance” under
Patient/clients.
A person comes for injection next day for diagnosed Pneumonia. S/he is tallied in
“99.Other” for injection in dressing room, but also as “re-attendance” under
Patient/clients and “re-attendance” under “3. Pneumonia”.
A midwife attends a normal delivery at home. The newborn died after 20 minutes
because of low-birth weight and hypothermia at the presence of midwife. She is tallied in
new Patient/clients, also in normal delivery at home for her normal delivery, and also in
newborn alive and finally in neonatal death (4 tallies)
13
A. OPD Morbidity
In this section, record information about morbidity and visits to your facility during the
month. Case definitions of the priority diseases are given in Annex 3. For facilities using
OPD registers, this information is gathered from the OPD register. For facilities using only a
family card, this information is tallied at the time of the visit. New cases are tallied by the
age and gender groups indicated. Note that only new cases of priority health problems (listed
separately in this section) need to be tallied by disease; all other new cases are grouped
together under code 99. Old cases are tallied by priority disease or under code 99 regardless
of age or gender and are reported in the column “Re-attendance”.
Use the A2 Comments section to highlight any unusual cases that you treated or to explain
any disease trends that you have noticed in your facility.
B. Nutrition Status
No acute malnutrition: number of children situated at 305 or above the median weight for
height curve, If MUAC is used, the number of children that fall in the Green zone.
Moderate acute malnutrition: number of children situated between 70-795 of the median
weight for height curve, If MUAC is used, the number of children that fall in the Yellow
zone.
Severe acute malnutrition: number of children situated below 705 of the median weight for
height curve, monthly total of the column “Severely Malnourished” and/or bilateral pedal
edema, If MUAC is used, the number of children that fall in the Red zone.
IMPORTANT: If a child comes to the facility as a patient for the first time or comes more
than 3 months after a previous check-up, the visit is tallied as “New” in both the nutrition
section and the Patient/client section. However, a child coming for check-up within 3 months
of a previous nutrition status check-up visit is tallied as “Re-attendance” in the Nutrition
Status section and the Patient/clients section.
The ‘##’ column refers to the actual number of units of contraceptives distributed:
number of dozens of condoms (condoms should be distributed by dozen, equaling
a month’s supply);
number of cycles of oral contraceptives distributed;
number of injections of injectable contraceptives given;
number of IUDs implanted;
number of permanent contraceptive interventions of male or female clients
performed, only used for referral to hospitals and CHC that perform them. The
hospitals and CHC that perform them noted these on the HMIR.
This information has been added to the number of visits in order to more accurately calculate
14
CYP, since information from bulk distribution centers (i.e., warehouses) hardly reflects the
actual number used. It allows one to evaluate the contribution of each facility to the total
provincial/ national CYP.
‘New Cases’ refers to all clients who have been registered as family planning users in your
health facility for the first time. This includes first ever users of contraceptives. “New
Cases” does not, however, include users who have changed methods during the month
without interrupting coverage, or who are being provided contraceptives because they are
passing through the catchment area and normally receive family planning services elsewhere,
or who recently came to your facility from another facility.
“Re-attendance” is tallied for each family planning client visit that is not a “new case” and
did not discontinue. (see Definitions)
C2. Obstetric Care. Gather this data from the Maternity Register, where it exists. Make sure
to record the deliveries assisted by trained staff in each facility. Record births assisted by
trained facility staff at home separately. The total number of births in the community can be
determined during the Annual Catchment Area Census, allowing these figures to be
compared later.
In some CHCs and most hospitals, women will be hospitalized for at least a few hours while
giving birth. To avoid double counting, a new section has been added in the HMIR, where
hospitals and CHC with in-patient care should report Obstetric and Neonatal conditions and
cases. The section in the MIAR is kept for those facilities that do not use the HMIR.
12
without the trained staff present are not recorded.
3. Assisted Delivery: all vaginal deliveries that require more than an episiotomy, i.e. use
of forceps or vacuum extractor; suturing of third and fourth peritoneal tears. Any of these
deliveries can also involve major or other complications, which need to be recorded under
the appropriate entry. Count Assisted Deliveries at “a. Facility” and “b. Home”
separately. Note that even at home, only those deliveries that are assisted by trained
facility staff during official or unofficial working hours are recorded. It does not include
those deliveries attended by facility staff at their private clinic. Deliveries that took place
without the trained staff present are not recorded.
The sum of 0.Normal Deliveries and 3. Assisted Deliveries gives the total number of
deliveries that took place for this facility during the period (i.e. were assisted by trained
staff of this facility).
2. Major complication all women presenting with major obstetric complications. This
includes women who delivered at the facility, as well as those who delivered elsewhere
but were referred to the facility post partum for major complications. Major Obstetric
Complications refers to 1 major causes of maternal death: (0)Haemorrhage (ante-, intra-
or post-partum), (3) Prolonged/obstructed labour, (2) Post-partum sepsis, (4)
Complications of abortion, (5) Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia, (1) Ectopic pregnancy,
(1)Ruptured uterus.
4. Other complications: all women presenting with obstetric complications not due to
any of the seven major causes. This includes women who delivered at the facility, as well
as those who delivered elsewhere, but who were referred to the facility post partum for
other complications. Examples of Other Complications that might be registered are third
and fourth degree lacerations, cervical tear, shoulder dystocia, premature rupture of
membranes, malaria in pregnancy, HIV, etc. Remember that episiotomy as well as first
and second degree lacerations are considered “normal delivery” in this classification and
should not be counted here.
5. Maternal death due to major complications: all women who presented a major
complication and died while pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy from
any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management, but not from
accidental or incidental causes. This includes only the deaths investigated by the staff of
the facility, not maternal deaths reported by others.
1. Maternal death due to other complications: all women who presented a
complication other than the major complications and died while pregnant or within 42
days of termination of pregnancy from any cause related to or aggravated by the
pregnancy or its management, but not from accidental or incidental causes. This includes
only the deaths investigated by the staff of the facility, not maternal deaths reported by
others
1. Cesarean section: all women who underwent cesarean section in this facility
8. Other obstetric surgery: all women who underwent surgery for any of the obstetric
complications listed above. Note: episiotomy and the repair of first and second degree
lacerations are considered “normal delivery” and should not be counted here.
11
4. Neonatal deaths: all newborns born alive that died within 23 days of birth. This
should include also newborns that were not delivered with assistance of the clinic staff,
but were seen or whose dead was investigated by staff from your facility in the facility,
but not cases that are only reported to you. It also includes those deaths occurred at home
delivery attended by skilled birth attendants and dead body was seen by them.
5. Still births: all newborns that were not alive at birth.
This concludes the instructions for the Monthly Integrated Tallysheet. Other entries in the
MIAR are taken from specific tally sheets and reports (Lab, EPI, TB, etc.)
17
3.1.3. MIAR Tally Sheet - Form
Patients/Clients
13
MIAR Tally Sheet GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Facilities OPD - Page 3 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year Month Facility Code Facility Name
New MHT HSC BHC Facility
Referred Referred Reatten-
Total New >= 5 <5 CHC Type
Out In dance
F M F M RH, PH, DH (OPD)
23. ANEMIA
24. GASTRO-INSTESTINAL WORMS
22. SKIN – INFECTION
21. SKIN – OTHER
27. PELVIC INFLAMMATORY D.
23. SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED D.
29. EYE INFECTION
30. ORO-DENTAL CONDITIONS
32. MICRO-NUTRIENT DISORDERS
99. OTHERS/UNLISTED DIAGNOSES
B. Nutrition Status
2. No acute malnutrition
2. Moderate Acute Malnutrition
3. Severe Acute Malnutrition
19
MIAR Tally Sheet GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Facilities OPD - Page 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year Month Facility Code Facility Name
Referred Out Referred In Reattendance New Cases C. Maternal & Neonatal Care
70
3.1. Monthly Integrated Activity Report – Facilities OPD
(MIAR)
3.1.0. MIAR – Guidelines for use
Integrated Health Services Report (MR-2)
0. Purpose of the Form
This reporting form has been designed to consolidate into one document most of the data
about health services offered at the MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC level and the outpatient hospital
level. This form is used by MHTs, HSCs, BHCs, CHCs, Hospital outpatient departments and
Hospital emergency rooms.
2. Data Sources
The data for this report comes from 20 principal sources:
2. OPD Tally sheet
2. The Antenatal Care Register
3. The Maternity Register
4. EPI register
2. Nutrition Surveillance Register/Child Clinic Register
1. Stock Register
7. Family Planning Register
3. Lab Register
9. TB Register
20. HIV Register
Some organizations use different registers for each of these data sources; others combine
some of the data sources into one form. Use the form in your facility which corresponds with
the listed data source. The MoPH is testing a tally sheet in conjunction with a patient card for
the sections A, B and C of this report. If the tally sheet is used, write totals in the
corresponding boxes of the MIAR. If the MIAR tally sheet is not used, refer to the
instructions for filling out the MIAR tally sheet in this manual for each of the corresponding
boxes in the MIAR form.
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4. Person who prepares
Staff responsible for the various services contribute the data related to their own activities
(e.g., the midwife for data on obstetric care, the Lab technician for laboratory data, etc.). The
senior staff member of the facility team reviews the report for accuracy and completeness
before signing it and sending it to the PPHO. OPD attached to Hospitals should also complete
a Monthly Integrated Activity Report in addition to the Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report.
Hospital maternity wards (district, provincial, regional) should use the MIAR for all obstetric
services, except for caesarean and other obstetric surgery services.
5. Definitions
This form is the key data collection instrument to collect most data required to calculate
HMIS indicators for the MHT/HSCBHC/CHC and outpatient hospital level. At the
provincial health office level, data from the forms of all facilities is aggregated to calculate
the indicators at the provincial level. Definitions of all of the indicators and the data required
to calculate them are included in Annex 2 and 3.
1. Instructions
This form has a total of 22 sections (A to K).
General information
Province name & code: Write the name and the Geocode of the province where the facility
is located. Use official reference lists to find the name and Geocode.
District name & code: Write the name and the Geocode of the district where the facility is
located. Use official reference lists to find the name and Geocode.
Facility name: Write the full name of the health facility reporting
Facility code: Write the ID code assigned by the MoPH to this facility
Month: Write the number of the month (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being
reported (usually this will be the month prior to the current month)
Year: Write the 4 digit year (Shamsi calendar) for which the data is being reported.
Facility Type: Circle the appropriate type of facility, for hospitals, circle the type of hospital:
H2 for regional/national hospitals, H2 for provincial hospitals, H3 for district hospitals.
Patients/clients: Totals for the corresponding row and column in the MIAR Tally Sheet are
written in each cell. Write the sum of the four preceding columns under the column labeled
“Total new.”
A. OPD Morbidity
In this section, record information about morbidity and visits to your facility during the
month. This information is gathered from the OPD tally sheet (see guidelines for MIAR tally
sheet). Totals for the corresponding row and column in the Tally Sheet are written in each
cell. Write the sum of the four preceding columns under the column labeled “Total new.”
Use the comments section to highlight any unusual cases that you treated or to explain any
disease trends that you have noticed in the catchment area of your facility.
72
B. Nutrition Status
Write the totals of the corresponding cells of the tally sheet in each cell.
C. Maternal Health
Write the totals of the corresponding cells of the tally sheet in each cell.
= during the last month, this drug was not present one day or more
= during the last month this drug was present every single day
Although the stock position of all drugs should be monitored regularly, the following is the
list of essential drugs for which the stock status should be reported monthly:
Acetyl Salicylic Acid/Paracetamol (if at least one is available on each day of the month, mark )
Mebendazole
Amoxicillin/Ampicillin (if at least one is available on each day of the month, mark )
INH
Rifampicin
Amp. Diazepam
Inj. Lidocaine
Metronidazole
Co-trimoxazole
Anti-hypertensives
Oral contraceptive
Injectable contraceptive
Condoms
IUD
TT vaccine
PENTA vaccine
ORS
Zinc tablets
Vitamin A
Ferrous Sulfate + folic acid
Oxytocine
Chloroquine
Artesunate + SP
73
Amitriptiline/Fluoxetine(if at least one is available on each day of the month, mark )
Gloves
D3. Comments about stock situation: Use this space to note any special drug stock
problems – this could include overstocks, understocks, expiring drugs that have been
destroyed, drugs that were received in bad condition. If there is not enough space to explain
the comment, add a separate sheet explaining the situation to the MIAR.
E. Immunizations
E0. Childhood Immunizations: Record in the boxes the total number of doses of PENTA 2
administered by age group. “Total” is the sum of all children who received PENTA3: (0-22)
+ (22-23). This information can be found in the EPI Monthly Vaccination Activity Report.
Similarly, from the same report note for each age group, the first doses of Measles
administered. “Total” is the sum of all children: (0-22) + (22-23) who received the first dose
of Measles vaccine.
E3. TT Immunizations
Record the total number of Tetanus Toxoïd immunizations given to pregnant women and
non-pregnant women separately. In the column TT3, list the number of TT2 doses given. In
the column >TT3, list the sum of all TT shots given after the second shot (TT3,TT4, …)
This information should be calculated from the EPI monthly tally sheet.
F. Laboratory Exams:
Although many facilities conduct a number of other lab tests that should be recorded in the
laboratory register, only the following tests and test results should be reported because they
confirm diagnoses of priority health problems. Break up the total number by male and
female. If necessary, use a separate tally sheet to abstract the data from the laboratory
register.
F0. Blood
0. Total malaria slides examined: total blood slides examined from for malaria
3. Total PF positive: slides positive for Plasmodium Falciparum
2. Total other Positive: slides positive for Plasmodium Vivax or other plasmodia, but
negative for Plasmodium Falciparum
4. Total HIV Examined: Total number of individuals who have been tested for HIV by
one or more rapid HIV tests1 in the last month.
5. Total HIV positive: Total number of those confirmed to be reactive for HIV by three
serial rapid HIV tests in the last month.
F3. Sputum
0. Total AFB slides examined: all sputum slides examined for AFB
3. Total AFB positive: number of slides found AFB +
G. Tuberculosis
1
Standard testing algorithm of NACP suggests three serial rapid HIV tests to confirm HIV positive cases. It
should be specified if an individual received the complete series of three serial rapid HIV tests.
74
This section is only filled out if the facility is involved in tuberculosis diagnosis and
treatment.
H. Community Health
2. No. of community meetings held with the community health committee: number
of meetings held in which the facility staff went to a village to meet with the health
committee or the health committee members come to health facility for meeting.
2. Number CHWs visited for supervision: obtained from the CHW supervisory log.
The number of CHWs visited in the field and the number of CHWs who came to the
monthly meeting in the facility.
I. Report Submitted
These details should be completed to trace the submission of the report. The boxes should be
filled by the health worker in charge of the facility who prepared the report or checked the
report for completeness before sending it to the PPHO.
Name: Enter the name of the health worker who was in charge of the facility at the time the
report was submitted, and who checked the report for accuracy and completeness.
Designation: Enter the designation of the person submitting the report.
Date: Write the date that the completed report was submitted (i.e., mailed or dispatched by
courier).
Signature: Sign the report.
J. Report received/aggregated
Date Received: The in-charge in the Provincial Health Directorate (or NGO) who receives
the report should note the date that the report was received at the office. This should be
recorded in the dispatch/receipt register.
Date aggregated: The person who completes the aggregation of the data on paper or the
entry of the data onto the computer should enter the date that the report was
aggregated/entered.
K. Comments
Use this space to note special activities or problems in the MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC or
community during the reporting period or to explain significant variations, trends or
anomalies in morbidity or service delivery. Add an extra sheet, if required. This is an
important mechanism to communicate significant issues to your supervisor and to explain
your variations of health problems and service trends.
72
1. Submission Guidelines:
This report is to be prepared by the staff member responsible for each of the key service areas
included: Ante-Natal Clinic, Maternity, Nutrition/Child Clinic, Reproductive Health service,
Laboratory, and Pharmacy. The data are reported from all OPDs: Hospitals, CHC, BHC,
HSC, MHTs. For hospitals, the emergency room also fills out this form; the in-charge of the
hospital combines the data of the OPD and the emergency room into one MIAR. The in-
charge of the health facility must review the report for missing data and other anomalies, note
any comments about important trends or problems in the catchment area and dispatch it to the
PPHO within 7 days of the end of each month. A copy of each report should be kept in a
chronological file within the facility.
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3.1.3. MIAR – Form
Monthly Integrated Activity Report Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
MIAR – Page 0 Ministry of Public Health
District Name & Code Province Name & Code
Year Month Facility Code Facility Name
Patients/Clients
77
Monthly Integrated Activity Report Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
MIAR – Page 3 Ministry of Public Health
D. Stock status Essential Referred Referred Re-atten New C. Maternal & Neonatal Care
Drugs/commodities Out In dance Cases
Acetyl Salicylic ## C0. Family planning
Acid/Paracetamol Units
Mebendazole 2. Oral (cycle)
Amoxicillin/Ampicillin 2. Injectable (injection)
INH 3. IUD (insertion)
Rifampicin 4. Condoms (Dozen)
Amp. Diazepam 2. Permanent (case)
Inj. Lidocaine C3. Pre- and Post-Natal
Metronidazole 2. Antenatal Visit - First
Co-trimoxazole 2. Antenatal Visit - Other
Anti-hypertensives 3. Postnatal Visit - First
Oral contraceptive 4. Postnatal Visit - Other
Injectable contraceptive C2. Obstetric Care
Condoms 2.2.Facility 2. Normal
IUD 2.2. Home Delivery
TT vaccine 2.2.Facility 2.Assisted
PENTA vaccine 2.2.Home Delivery
ORS 3. Major complication
Zinc tablets 4. Other Complication
Vitamin A 2.Maternal Death due to Major
Ferrous Sulfate + folic acid 1. Maternal Death due to Other
Oxytocine 7. Cesarean section
Chloroquine 3. Other obstetric surgery
Artesunate + SP C4. Neonatal Care
Amitriptiline/ Fluoxetine 2. Newborn Alive
Gloves 2. Low Birth Weight
D3. Comments about stock 3. Neonatal Complication
4. Neonatal Death
2. Stillbirth
E. Immunizations G. Tuberculosis
Total 22-23 m 0-22 m E2. Childhood G0. Case detection
1. PENTA2 1. Number of new smear (+) cases
2. Measles (first dose) 2. Number that started treatment
>TT3 TT3 E2. TT Immunization G3. Treatment complete and cured
0. Pregnant women 1. Number of cases completed and smear (-)
3. Non-Pregnant women H. Community Health
F. Laboratory Exams 2. Number of meetings with
Female Male F0. Blood community health committee
1. Total malaria slides examined 2. Number of CHWs seen for supervision
2. Total PF positive I. Report Transmitted
3. Total other positive Name
4. Total HIV examined Designation
5. Total HIV positive Date
F3. Sputum Signature
1. Total AFB slides examined J. Report Received/Aggregated
2. Total AFB positive Date Received
Data aggregated/computerized
Any special activities or problems, significant anomalies or trends in morbidity and service delivery K. Comments:
73
3.8. Facility Status Report – MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC (FSR)
3.8.0. FSR – Guidelines for use
3. Lay-out
The form is an A4 two page (three sides) form, printed in landscape mode.
2. Data Sources
The data for the form comes from
2. Inventory Register
2. Visitor’s Book
3. Facility inspection
4. Various activity records (e.g Health Education)
2. Staff records
1. Diary or register of IEC and other activities
If records are not available or incomplete, the in-charge of the facility will personally check
the accuracy of the required information. If data is not available for a reporting period, the
in-charge will note “NA” in the corresponding entry.
4. Who Prepares
The in-charge of the MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC prepares this form in two copies. When
reporting annually, one copy is submitted to the PPHD office by 7th of Hamal of each year
or, when reporting six monthly by the 7th of the month after the last month in the reporting
period. Another copy is filed at the MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC.
5. Definitions
MD medical doctor
CHW community health worker
79
1. Instructions
0. Province Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the province where the
facility is located
3. District Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the district where the
facility is located
2. Facility Code & Name: Write the MoPH ID code and the name of the
MHT/HSC/BHC/CHC
4. Type of facility: Circle MHT, HSC, BHC, or CHC
5. Period: Write the months (from… to ….) and the year (of……) for which the report is
being prepared. Dates should reflect the Afghan Shamsi calendar. When the report is
prepared annually, note that this year is not the same as the year in which you are preparing
the report. For example, if you are preparing the report in the month of Hamal of 2332, write
2330 here because the report you are preparing is for year 2330.
1. Building: A building is considered temporary if the building’s original and permanent
future intended use was/is use for something other than a health facility. Examples of
temporary buildings are schools or other public buildings used as health facilities, rented
houses, shops, or other buildings. A building is considered permanent if the original or
permanent future use is as a health facility.
7. Main construction material: Circle “concrete” or “other.” “Concrete” means having at
least a concrete base and concrete supporting beams for the walls and roof (in theory, earth-
quake proof). The “concrete” reflects the Dari term “ ”پختهand the “other” reflects the Dari
term “”خام.
8. Main source of drinking water: The usual source of drinking water. If a facility
normally uses a water tap, except for the dry months, when it uses a well, the main source of
drinking water is the water tap. Safe means water obtained from a covered deep well, a tube
well with a covered base, piped water, and/or chlorinated water from closed containers.
Other means all other sources.
0. Main source available: Write the number of months the main source of drinking water is
available; write “22” if the source is available throughout the year.
01 Electricity: Circle YES if available, even only a few hours a day, and NO if not available
at all.
00. If Electricity is YES, indicate the main source of electricity by ticking any one of the
options. If the facility usually relies on line electricity, and has generator backup, only line
should be ticked.
03. Indicate the Average hours per 34 hours that electricity from the main source is
available, e.g., if line electricity is available six hours a day and a generator is used two hours
a day on average, write “six”
02. On drivable road: Circle YES or NO to indicate whether or not the facility is located on
a drivable road.
04. If not, walking time from road: If the facility is not located on a drivable road, write the
number of hours and minutes needed to walk to the nearest drivable road, e.g., 90 minutes,
note as 2 hour 30 minutes. A road is any road that is regularly used by motorized vehicles,
regardless of its shape or condition.
05. Referral facility name & code: Write the name and the MoPH ID code of the most
frequently used referral facility--the general facility (hospital) that is most often used for
30
complicated cases. Many facilities can use a specialized hospital (e.g., eye hospital) for
specific cases – do not write the name of this hospital.
01. Latrine for use by patients: circle YES if there are latrines for patients, NO if not. If
the facility has latrines for use by staff of the facility only, the answer should be NO.
01. If Yes, type: If YES is circled, mark the type of latrine. Open means that flies and other
animals have access to the waste, e.g., as in the traditional Afghan latrines. Closed means
that flies and other animals have no access to the waste, e.g., VIP latrines, flush latrines, …
08. Separate latrine for male and female: Circle YES if there are separate latrines for men
and women, circle NO if there are not.
00. No. of Beds: Write the number of patient beds currently available at the HSC/BHC/CHC.
31. Waste disposal: Circle YES or NO as to whether the facility has a special area for
medical waste.
30 If YES, type: Mark the type of waste disposal. Incinerator means a special device to
completely burn the medical waste. Burn and bury means a place where waste is
accumulated, then burned and buried at regular intervals. Other means any other waste
disposal method other than the aforementioned or no disposal method.
33. Communication: Mark Radio and/or Telephone if they are available. Write the facility
phone number if it is property of facility not of the personnel.
32. Transportation: Mark the appropriate. Ambulance means a vehicle that can transport a
patient. Mark whether the vehicle is usable of not. Motorbike refers to a motorbike for
outreach activities. Other means any other means of transport for a patient (including
transport by animals). None means that no transport for patients is available.
B. Human Resources
B2. Supervision
Write the number of supervisory visits performed during the last reporting period by the
implementer and by others (MoPH, UN agency, donor) at this facility. Count only
supervisory visits, not monitoring or evaluation visits.
32
C. Equipment status
For each kind of equipment listed, mark the number of units present in the facility. The exact
number is important for the facility in-charge. At the provincial and national levels, the exact
number of some of the equipment may lose its importance during analysis. For larger
facilities, the in-charge may have to sum up reports from different departments.
Usable: some parts or accessories may be missing but the equipment can still be used for its
basic functions, e.g.. some clamp or forceps of the Minor Surgery Kit may be missing, but the
kit can still be used; however, if only a scalpel and needle holder are left, the kit is no longer
usable.
Not usable: pieces are missing or broken to the extent that the equipment cannot be used for
its basic function.
0. Scissors: Record only those Scissors that are available for immediate use without having
to open a set. Don’t record those are inside the sets.
3. Dressing forceps: Record only those Dressing forceps that are available for immediate use
without having to open a set. Don’t record those are inside the sets.
D. Services provided
Mark whether or not each listed service was provided on a regular basis during the last month
of reporting period in the Facility and community by the facility staff and CHWs supervised
by the facility staff. Note; activities under D3. Maternal and Neonatal health at community
level record just those services performed by the facility staff which is taking place during an
out-reach or at home delivery by skilled birth attendants (SBA).
32
E. Remarks and observations
Write all notable achievements, observations or experiences regarding the functioning of the
facility during the last reporting period in this space. For example, if the facility was closed
for a period of time, mention this as well as the reason for the closure, or, if no CHWs were
trained, mention the reason and suggest a remedy.
Finally, the in charge of the facility should verify the accuracy of the report and nd write
his/her name and designation, as well as the date the report was completed , and sign.
F. Submission guidelines
Two copies of this report should be filled out by the in-charge of the clinic. When reporting
annually, one copy is sent to the PPHD/NGO by the 7th of Hamal of each year; another copy
is filed and kept in the facility. When reporting every 1 months, the report is sent by the 7th
of the month after the last month of the reporting period.
33
3.8.3. FSR – Form
Facility Status Report – FSR GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 0 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
A. General Facility Information
2. District Code & Name 2. Province Code & Name
…..To…….From 2. Period MHT SHC BHC CHC 4. Type of 3. Facility Code &Name
……………Of facility
Other Concrete 7. Main construction material 1.2. Permanent: 1.2. Temporary 1. Building
9. Main source available ….……….. months per year Other Safe 3. Main source of drinking water
……..12. Average hours/24 hours Wind Solar Generator Line 22. Main source of electricity Yes No 20. Electricity
12. Referral facility name & code …..Hrs ……..Min 14. If not, walking time from road Yes No 13. On drivable road
No Yes 13. Separate latrine for male and female Open Closed 27. If Yes, type: Yes No 11. Latrine for use by patients
Other Burn and Bury Incinerator 22. If yes, type: No Yes 20. Waste disposal 19. No of beds
23.2.Ambulance: Usable Not Usable 23. Transportation 22.2.Telephone: If yes:Phone# 22. Communication
23.4.None 23.3.Other 23.2.Motorbike 22.3. None 22.2. Radio
B. Human Resources
B0. Facility Staff status
Refresh Female Male Type Refresh Female Male Type
20 Community Health Supervisor 1. Nurse
22. Vaccinator 2. Assistant nurse
22. Support Staff 3. Midwife
4. Community midwife
B3. Community Health 5. MD General
1. CHWs ever trained 1. MD Specialist
2. CHWs trained and active 7.Pharmacist
Other Implementer B2.Supervision 3. Laboratory Technician
2. Number of supervisory visits 9. Pharmacy Technician
34
Facility Status Report – FSR GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 3 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
C. Equipment status
# Not Usable # Usable Type # Not Usable # Usable Type
14. Vaccine carrier(+ice packs) 1. Scissors
22. Otoscope 2. Dressing forceps
21. Flashlight 3. Thermometer
27. Suction 4. Clean delivery kit
23. Midwifery kit 2. ORS measuring jug
29. Sterilizer 1. MUAC tape
20. OPD Examining table 7. Stethoscope
22. Oxygen gauge & cylinder 3. Sputum and blood specimen bottles
22. Neonatal resuscitation trolley 9. Vision testing chart
23. Hemoglobin meter 20. Sphygmomanometer
24.Hand crank/electrical centrifuge 22. Salter scale
22. Blood cross matching set 22. Adult weight scale
21. Microscope 23. EPI Cold box/refrigerator
D. Services provided
Community Facility D4. Infectious Diseases Community Facility D0. General Curative
1. TB detection & referral 1. Curative OPD
2. TB labdiagnosis 2. IMCI implemented
3. DOTS 3. ARI Case Management
4. Malaria lab diagnosis 4. DD Case Management
D5. Mental health 5. Malaria Case Management
2. Awareness raising 6. Minor surgery (Incision, Drainage, suture)
2. Case detection D3. Child Health
3. Treatment and follow-up 1. Routine Growth Monitoring
D1.Family planning 2. Community Therapeutic Center
1. Oral contraceptives 3. Child Immunization (EPI)
2. Injectable contraceptives D2. Maternal Health
3. IUD 1. Antenatal care
4. Condoms 2. TT immunization
D1. Disability services 3. Delivery by trained staff
2. Awareness raising 4. Manual Removal of Placenta
2. Case detection 2. Removal of retained products
3. Referral 1. Assisted Vaginal Delivery
1. Blood Transfusion
32
Facility Status Report – FSR GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 2 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
D0. Community Health Worker Supervision Community Facility D8. IEC Activities
2. Number of Health Post Active 1.Obstetric complication and birth preparedness
2. # of Health Post Supervised at least twice 2. Family Planning
3. Nutrition
4. IMCI
2. Injection Safety
E. Remarks and observations
F. Submission
Position Name
Date Signature
31
3.0. Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report (HMIR)
3.0.0. HMIR – Guidelines for use
The hospitals report maternity care, outpatient services, and laboratory services using the
same Monthly Integrated Activity Report (MIAR) that is completed by BHCs and CHCs.
2. Data Sources
The data for the form comes from:
Indoor Patient Registers of each departments (including nutrition)
Daily Indoor Patient Census of each departments
Operating Theatre Registers
X-ray and Ultrasound Register
Pharmacy
4. Who prepares
This form is mainly used to report information about referral services provided at district,
provincial and regional hospitals. The document is prepared by the staff of the various
departments and then compiled under the supervision of the Hospital Director. The report is
sent to the PPHO by the 7th day of each month. The PPHO/NGO enters all hospital data into
the HMIS database and sends a quarterly electronic copy to MoPH/HMIS
5. Definitions
Most of the terms on this form are self-explanatory. There are two calculated entries:
Number of Patient Days: This number is an indicator of the volume of in patients who are
treated during a given month. An example for the calculation of this indicator is included
below in the Detailed Instructions.
Average length of stay: This number is an indicator of the efficiency of hospitalization. To
calculate this indicator, take the sum of the duration of hospitalization (the number of
calendar days a patient stays in the hospital) for all patients who were discharged and died
during the month and divide it by the total number of patients discharged and died during that
37
month. An example for the calculation of this indicator is included below in the Detailed
Instructions.
1. Detailed Instructions
General information
Province Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the province where the
hospital is located
District Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the district where the hospital
is located
Hospital Name: Write the name of the hospital
Facility Code: Write the MoPH ID code that identifies the Hospital
Type of hospital: Tick RH (National/Regional/specialized hospital), PH (Provincial hospital,
DH (District hospital)
A. In Patients
Using the InPatient Register, provide a summary of patient movements during the month in
the categories listed below. For each of the listed categories, write the total number of
children under five male and female separately, females over five and males over five.
0. Admissions: all patients admitted as inpatients. Note that maternal and neonatal data
related to deliveries performed at the hospital are defined on the MIAR. However, those
hospitalized are included in the general admission register and counted here.
3. Referred-in: count those who have been referred-in from other health facilities
2. Number of Patient days: Each morning, at 3 O’clock (or a given time, but the same time
every day or night), add together the number of patients who are hospitalized at that time.
Note that some patients (normal deliveries) will only stay a few hours. Some of them will
be counted and some of them will not be counted, the total will closely reflecting the total
full patient days for these types of patients. See Figure 1 below for an example.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
6 7 8 4 4 8 8 5 5 6 7 9 10 7 8 5
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Tot
3 4 4 6 7 7 7 7 8 5 8 8 8 5 x 191
Figure 1 - Number of patient days: Calculation example
For example, if there were 1 people on the 2st, 7 on the 2nd, 3 on the 3rd, etc., the
number of patient days would be 1+7+3+etc… or at total of 292. In the example, the
month has only 30 days, so day 32 is not counted. The number of daily inpatients should
be obtained from the census conducted each morning. The number of patient days per
month when combined with the number of available beds during the same period allows
calculation of the bed occupancy rate.
4. Average length of stay: sum of the number of days stayed in the hospital (from the date
of admission) for all patients who were discharged (or died) during the month divided by
the total number of patients who were discharged (or died) during that month. In the
example given in Figure 7, 23 patients were discharged or died during the month and they
33
stayed in the hospital for a total of 222 days: an average length of stay of 1.7 days (see
Figure 7 below).
5. Discharged/Outcome: Note the total number of inpatients discharged. For the discharged
patients, write the total that corresponds to each category:
0. Recovered/improved: inpatients that were discharged because their status
improved, including those who need some further ambulatory care
3. Absconded/defaulted: patients that are no longer hospitalized, but whose
whereabouts are unknown. Ideally, this number should be zero.
2. Not Improved: patients who were discharged without improvement in status.
This includes patients whose status did not improve, for whom no further
treatment is useful.
4. Referred-out: those patients who have been referred to other medical
facilities for more specialized care.
5. Deaths: all inpatients who died in the hospital before being discharged, or
who were dead when being discharged. These are the patients that have been
counted at least once as occupying a bed before being discharged. It includes
the deaths reported in sections G. Maternal and Neonatal and F. Cases and
deaths of priority diseases <2 of this form.
Only malnourished children who need hospitalization are taken into account. Ambulatory
screening and treatment of the nutritional status of children under five is noted in the MIAR.
0. Admitted: Number of malnourished children admitted into the hospital
3. Improved: Number discharged with improvement
2. Defaulter: dropped out, left the hospital before being discharged
4. Referred out: Number of hospitalized malnourished children referred to other facilities
for more specialized care
5. Deaths: number of malnourished children who died
C. Imaging services
Using the imaging department records, report the number of images taken during the month
according to the following categories:
2. Chest x-ray
2. Abdomen x-ray
3. Skeletal x-ray
4. Ultrasound
2. Other
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D. Surgical interventions
Using the operation theatre (OT) register, record the total number of surgical interventions of
the following types that were performed during the month. This section gives more details on
cases listed under H. New Inpatient Cases that need surgical intervention. Be sure to sort
them out by Major and Minor interventions
Major surgery is generally done under general anesthesia with respiratory assistance. Even
when using regional/spinal anesthesia, surgery is considered major if penetration of a body
cavity (e.g. abdomen, thorax, skull) is involved or extensive orthopedic surgeries on the
extremities, like joint replacements, bone reconstruction, internal and external fracture
fixations. Likewise when significant resection or changes to the anatomy are involved or
organs are removed, like amputations of arms or legs. Neurosurgery is considered major
independent of the anesthesia used. Major surgery always requires a dedicated intervention
room.
Minor surgery is generally done under local or regional anesthesia. Certain interventions
are never considered minor surgery regardless of the type of anesthesia (see above under
Major surgery). Minor surgery does not require a dedicated intervention room, as long as
standard infection control criteria are respected during the procedure. Examples include:
removal of foreign bodies that do not penetrate abdomen, thorax or skull; nasal cautery;
removal of warts and verrucae; removal of toenails; excisions of lipoma, intradermal naevi,
papilloma, dermatofibroma, sebaceaous cysts; aspiration of joints, cysts, bursae, hydrocoele;
incision of abscesses,cysts, thrombosed piles; hormonal implants; nail bed ablation; wound
suturing.
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E. Stock status of hospital drugs
Go through the stock register (and check the shelves where you may keep some drugs for day
to day distribution) and place a cross () in the box to the right of any of the following
indicator drugs that were not present for one or more days during the month. Situations, in
which a couple of tablets of a drug remain, but not a number sufficient to serve an adult
patient, should also be considered as the drug not being present. If the drug was present
every single day of the month, a tick-off () should be placed in the box to the left of the
name of the drug:
= during the last month, this drug was not present one day or more
= during the last month this drug was present every single day
Although the stock position of all drugs should be monitored regularly, the following is the
list of essential drugs whose stock status should be reported monthly:
ACT
Atropine inj
Benzyl Penicilline inj
Digoxine
Ergometrine inj
Furosemide inj
Gentamycine inj
Iodine poluvidone
Ketamine inj
Lidocaine 25 spinal inj
Magnesium Sulphate
Morphine inj
Naloxone inj
Hydralazine inj
Oxygen
Pethidine inj
Phenobarbital inj
Quinine inj
Ranitidine inj
Ringer lactate IV
Salbutamol inj
Sodium chloride IV
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Note under < 34h the number of deaths occurring within 24 hours of admission to the
hospital, under >34h, deaths occurring after 24 hours of admission.
Note: any death after hospitalization occurring in the hospital is considered hospital death.
Note that the cases counted in this section are also listed under H. New Inpatient Cases and
G2. Neonatal care where appropriate.
G3. Obstetrics
0. Normal Delivery: all the vaginal deliveries requiring no intervention more
complicated than an episiotomy, including those that require suturing of first and second
degree perineal tears. Normal Delivery does not include the use of forceps or a vacuum
extractor. Note that normal delivery cannot have deaths – deaths are listed under G2.3
Major complications or G2.4 Other complications.
3. Assisted Delivery: all vaginal deliveries that require more than an episiotomy, i.e. use
of forceps or vacuum extractor; suturing of third and fourth perineal tears. Any of these
deliveries can also involve major or other complications, which need to be recorded under
the appropriate entry. Note that assisted deliveries cannot have deaths – deaths are listed
under G2.3 Major complications or G2.4 Other complications.
The sum of 0.Normal Deliveries and 3. Assisted Deliveries gives the total number of
deliveries that took place for this facility during the period (i.e. were assisted by trained
staff of this facility).
2. Major complication all women presenting with major obstetric complications. This
includes women who delivered at the facility, as well as those who delivered elsewhere
but were referred to the facility post partum for major complications. Major Obstetric
Complications refers to 1 major causes of maternal death: (0)Haemorrhage (ante-, intra-
or post-partum), (3) Prolonged/obstructed labour, (2) Post-partum sepsis, (4)
Complications of abortion, (5) Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia, (1) Ectopic pregnancy,
(1)Ruptured uterus.
4. Other complications: all women presenting with obstetric complications not due to
any of the seven major causes. This includes women who delivered at the facility, as well
as those who delivered elsewhere, but who were referred to the facility post partum for
other complications. Examples of Other Complications that might be registered are third
and fourth degree lacerations, cervical tear, shoulder dystocia, premature rupture of
membranes, malaria in pregnancy, HIV, etc. Remember that episiotomy as well as first
and second degree lacerations are considered “normal delivery” in this classification and
should not be counted here.
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5. Cesarean section: all women who underwent cesarean section in this facility. Note
that Cesarean section cannot have deaths counted – deaths are listed under G2.3 Major
complications or G2.4 Other complications.
I. Comments
Any comments that may help clarify incomplete data or particular trends observed can be
mentioned here.
J. Report Submission
This section should be filled out by the person responsible for submitting and receiving the
report.
Report Submitted
These details should be completed to trace the submission of the report. The boxes should be
filled by the hospital in-charge who prepared the report or checked the report for
completeness before sending it to the PPHO.
Name: Enter the name of the hospital in-charge at the time the report was submitted,
Designation: Enter the designation of the person submitting the report.
Date: Write the date that the completed report was submitted (i.e., mailed or dispatched by
courier).
Signature: Sign the report.
Report received/aggregated
Received by: Initials of the person at the PPHO who receives the report
Date Received: The in-charge in the Provincial Public Health Office who receives the report
should note the date that the report was received at the office. This should be recorded in the
dispatch/receipt register.
Aggregated/computerized by: Initials of the person(s) who aggregates/computerizes the
report.
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Date aggregated: The person who completes the aggregation of the data on paper or the
entry of the data onto the computer should enter the date that the report was
aggregated/entered.
1. Submission Guidelines:
This report is to be prepared by the staff member responsible for each of the key service areas
included. The data are reported from all Inpatient departments. The in-charge of the hospital
must review the report for missing data and other anomalies, noting any comments about
important trends or problems in the catchment area and dispatch it to the PPHO within 7 days
of the end of each month. A copy of each report should be kept in a chronological file within
the hospital.
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3.0.3. HMIR - Form
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Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report GOVERNMENTOF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HMIR - Page 3 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year Month Facility Code Hospital Name
H. New Inpatient Cases
Death Referr. Referr. >= 5 <5
Total Priority health problem/disease
Out In F M F M
2. Weapon wounded
2. Road traffic accidents
3. Occupational injuries
4. Burns, scalds & frostbite
2 Fractures& dislocations
1 Cerebral Concussions
7. Other injuries
3. Cerebro-vascular accidents
9. Ischemic Heart Diseases
20. Other Cardiovascular
22. Meningitis/encephalitis
22. Epilepsy & convulsions
23. Other Neurological
24. Diabetes & related
22. Micronutrient deficiencies
21. Acute abdomen
27. Peptic disorders
23. Other Gastro-intestinal
29. Abdominal Hernia
20. Liver, gall bladder & pancreas
22. Urinary tract infections
22. Other Uro-genital conditions
23. Pelvic Inflammatory disease
24. Dysentery (all types)
22. Diarrhea (except dysentery)
21. Malaria
27. Tuberculosis
23. Typhoid
29. Musculo-skeletal infections
30. Sepsis
32. Other infectious
32. Common Mental Problems
33. Substances abuse
34. Severe Mental Problems
32. Respiratory tract infections
31. ENT
37. Other Respiratory Conditions
33. Eye conditions
39. Skin conditions
40. Obstetric & pregnancy related
42. Gynecological (non pregnant)
42. Neonatal conditions
43. Musculoskeletal
44. Surgical cases (unspecified)
00. All other new inpatient cases
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Hospital Monthly Inpatient Report GOVERNMENTOF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HMIR - Page 2 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
I. Remarks
J. Report submission
Report Received/aggregated Report Submitted
2. Received by 2. Name
1. Date received 2. Function
7. Aggregated/computerized by 3. Date
3. Date aggregated/computerized 4. Signature
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3.01. Hospital Status Report Form (HSR)
3. Lay-out
The form is an A4 two page (four sides) form, printed in landscape mode.
2. Data Sources
The data for the form comes from
2. Inventory Register
2. Visitor’s Book
3. Facility inspection
4. Various activity records (e.g Health Education)
2. Staff records
1. Diary or register of IEC and other activities
If records are not available or are incomplete, the in-charge of the facility will personally
check the accuracy of the required information and complete the information. If data is
ultimately not available for a reporting period, the in-charge will note “NA” in the
corresponding entry.
4. Who Prepares
The in-charge of the hospital prepares two copies of this form. When reporting annually, one
copy is submitted to the PPHO by the 7th of Hamal each year, or, when reporting six
monthly, submitted by the 7th of the month after the last month in the reporting period.
Another copy is filed at the hospital for future reference.
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5. Definitions
MD medical doctor
CHW community health worker
1. Instructions
0. Province Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the province where the
hospital is located
3. District Code & Name: Write the Geo-code and the name of the district where the
hospital is located
2. Hospital Code & Name: Write the MoH ID code and the name of the hospital
4. Type of hospital: circle H2 (National or specialized hospital), H2 (Regional or provincial
hospital, H3 (District hospital)
5. Period: Write the months (from… to ….) and the year (of……) for which the report is
being prepared. Dates should reflect the Afghan Shamsi calendar. When the report is
prepared annually, note that this year is not the same as the year you are preparing the report.
When you are reporting more frequently, the same is true for the first reporting period of the
year. For example, if you are preparing the report in the month of Hamal of 2332, write 2330
here because the report you are preparing is for year 2330.
1. Building: A building is considered temporary if the building’s original and permanent
future intended use was/is use for something other than a health facility. Examples of
temporary buildings are tents and prefab structures used while the hospital building is being
renovated or enlarged, schools or other public buildings used as health facilities, rented
houses, shops, or other buildings. A building is considered permanent if the original or
permanent future use is as a health facility.
7. Main construction material: circle concrete or other. “Concrete” means having at least
a concrete base and concrete supporting beams for walls and roof (in theory, earthquake
proof. The “concrete” reflects the Dari term “ ”پختهand the “other” reflects the Dari term
“”خام.
8. Main source of drinking water: this refers to the usual source of drinking water. If a
facility normally uses a water tap, except for the dry months, when it uses a well, the main
source of drinking water is the water tap. Safe means water obtained from a covered deep
well, a tube well with a covered base, piped water, and/or chlorinated water from closed
containers. Other means all other sources.
0. Main source available: Write the number of months the main source of drinking water is
available, write “22” if the source is available throughout the year.
01 Electricity: circle YES if available, even only a few hours a day, and NO if not available
at all.
00. If Electricity is YES, indicate the main source of electricity by ticking any one of the
options. If the facility relies usually on line electricity, and has generator backup, only line
should be ticked.
03. Indicate the Average hours per 34 hours that electricity from the main source is
available, e.g., if line electricity is available six hours a day and a generator is used two hours
a day on average, write “six”
02. On drivable road: Circle YES or NO to indicate whether or not the facility is located on
a drivable road.
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04. If not, walking time from road: If the answer is “No,” write the number of hours and
minutes needed to walk to the nearest drivable road, e.g., 90 minutes, note as 2 hour 30
minutes. A “drivable road” is any road regularly used by motorized vehicles, regardless of its
shape or condition.
05. Referral facility name & code: write the name and the MoPH ID code of the most
frequently used referral facility–the general facility (hospital) that is most often used for
complicated cases. Many facilities can use a specialized hospital (e.g., eye hospital) for
specific cases – do not write the name of this hospital.
01. Latrine for use by patients: circle YES if there are latrines for patients, NO if not. If
the facility has latrines for use by staff of the facility only, the answer should be NO.
01. If Yes, type: If YES is circled, mark the type of latrine. Open means that flies and other
animals have access to the waste, e.g., the traditional Afghan latrines. Closed means flies and
other animals have no access to the waste, e.g., VIP latrines, flush latrines, etc.
08. Separate latrine for male and female: circle YES if there are separate latrines for men
and women, circle NO if there are not.
00. No. of Beds: Write the number of patient beds currently available at the hospital for each
of the wards. This includes both occupied and unoccupied beds.
31. Waste disposal: Circle YES or NO as to whether the facility has a special area for
medical waste.
30 If YES, type: mark the type of waste disposal. Incinerator means a special device to
completely burn the medical waste. Burn and bury means a place where waste is
accumulated, then burned and buried at regular intervals. (Beware that an oven-like
construction is often referred to as “incinerator” in Afghanistan when it really is a “burn and
bury.” ) Other means any other than the afore-mentioned or none.
33. Bathroom: Circle it if facility has bathroom for patient use.
33. Communication: Mark Radio and/or Telephone if they are available. Write the hospital
phone number if available and is property of facility not of the personnel
32. Transportation: Mark the appropriate. Ambulance means any vehicle that can transport
a patient. Mark whether the vehicle is usable of not. Motorbike refers to a motorbike for
outreach activities. Other means any other means of transport for a patient (including
transport by animals). None means that no transport for patients is available.
B. Human Resources
The staff categories listed are those listed in the BPHS and EPHS for hospitals. Note that a
DH has staff required for BPHS and additional staff for the EPHS. Write down the number
of female and male staff of each category based on their actual graduate degrees not the
position s/he assigned, e.g. in case of staff scarcity if a female nurse is hired instead of a
midwife, write female nurse not midwife. Write the number of staff in each category who are
certified according to the new MoPH certification rules and the number of staff who attended
at least one refresher training during the last reporting period.
B3. Physicians
03. Other Medical Specialist: any MD specialist who is not a Surgeon, Anesthetist,
Pediatrician, Orthopedist, ObGyn, or Dentist.
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B5. Support Staff
21. Administrative staff: any clerks, computer operators, accountants, etc. The in-charge of
the administration of the hospital is listed under management.
28. Technical maintenance: any technical person for maintenance like plumber, electrician
smith etc.
C. Supervision
Write the number of supervisory visits to this facility performed during the last reporting
period by the PPHO and by others (NGO, UN agency, donor). Count only supervisory visits,
not monitoring or evaluation visits.
D. Equipment list
For each of the listed types of equipments, write the number that are present in the facility.
The actual number is useful for the in-charge of the hospital. For several items, the actual
number becomes less useful for provincial and national analysis. For larger facilities, the in-
charge will have to sum reports from different departments.
Usable: The equipment is new and complete, or some parts or accessories may be missing
but the equipment can still be used for its basic functions, e.g., some clamp or forceps of the
Minor Surgery Kit may be missing, but the kit can still be used; however, if only a scalpel
and needle holder are left, the kit is no longer usable.
Not usable: pieces are missing or broken to the extent that the equipment cannot be used for
its basic function.
Recommended contents of several of the kits are listed in BPHS 2020, Annexes B,C,D, and
E.
E. Services provided
Mark whether or not each listed service was provided on a regular basis during the last month
of reporting period in the Facility and community by the facility staff and CHWs supervised
by the facility staff. Note; activities under D3. Maternal and Neonatal health at community
level record just those services performed by the facility staff which is taking place during an
out-reach or at home delivery by skilled birth attendants (SBA).
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E01. Community services
0. Number of Health Post Active: Write the number of Health Posts active and reporting to
this facility. Active refers to a HP which has a CHW who has finished the first phase of
training and has reported in the last month.
3. Number of Health Posts Supervised twice: Write the number of Health Posts supervised
at least twice this reporting period. If a CHW attend a monthly meeting in a hospital this is
also counted as supervision.
Write all notable achievements, observations or experiences regarding the functioning of the
hospital during the last reporting period in this space. For example, if the hospital was closed
for a period of time, mention this as well as the reason for the closure, or, if no CHWs were
trained, mention the reason and suggest a remedy.
Finally, the in charge of the hospital should verify the accuracy of the report and write his/her
name and designation, as well as the date of the submission of the report, and sign.
Two copies of this report should be filled out by the in-charge of the clinic. When reporting
annually, one copy is sent to the PPHD/NGO by the 7th of Hamal of each year; another copy
is filed and kept in the facility. When reporting every 1 months, the report is sent by the 7th
of the month after the last month of the reporting period.
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3.01.3. HSR – Form
Hospital Status Report –HSR GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HSR - Page 0 of 4 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
A. General Facility Information
2. District Code & Name 2. Province Code & Name
3.Hospital Code &Name
…..To……From :Month 2. Period National/specialist (H2) Provincial/regional (H2) District (H3) 4. Type of
……………Of : Year Hospital
Stone Mud Concrete 7. Main construction material 1.2.Temporary: 1.2.Permanent: 1. Building
9. Main source available ….….. months per year Other Safe 3. Main source of drinking water
……..12. Average hours/day Wind Solar Generator Line 22. Main sources of electricity Yes No 20. Electricity
12. Referral facility name & code …..Hrs ……..Min 14. If not, walking time from road Yes No 13. On drivable road
No Yes 13. Separate latrine for male and female Open Closed 27. If Yes, type: Yes No 11. Latrine for use by patients
29.2. Other 29.4. Surgery 29.3. Adult Internal 29.2. Ob&Gyn 29.2.Pediatric 19. No of beds
Other Burn and Bury Incinerator 22. If yes, type No Yes 20. Medical waste disposal
22.Bathroom
24.2.Ambulance: Usable Not Usable 24. Transportation 23.2.Telephone: If yes: Phone #: …………………….. 23. Communication
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Hospital Status Report GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HSR - Page 3 of 4 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
B. Human Resources
Refresh Female Male Type Refresh Female Male Type
27. Pharmacy technician B0. Management
23. X-ray technician 1. Hospital Director
29. Lab Technician 2. Medical Director
30. Blood bank technician 3. Nursing Director
32. Dental Technician 3. Administrator
33. Vaccinator B3. Physicians
33. Nutrition worker 5. Surgeon
34. Technical assistants 6. Ophthalmologist
32. Community Health Supervisor 7. ENT
B5. Support Staff 3. Anesthesiologist
31. Administrative Staff 9. ObGyn
37. Storekeeper 10. Pediatrician
33. Technical maintenance 11.Radiologist
39. Cleaners, waste & grounds 22. Other Medical Specialist
40. Laundry 23. General MD
42. Cook 24. Stomatologist
42. Drivers B2. Nurses & Midwives
43. Guards and porters 22. Midwifes
44. Tailor 21. Nurse operating theatre
42. Mullah 27. Nurse surgical ward
41. Barber 23. Nurse internal ward
47. Mortician 29. Nurse pediatric ward
B1. Community Health 20. Nurse anesthetic
43. CHWs ever trained 22. Nurse ER and OPD
49. Trained CHWs and active 22. Assistant Nurse
C. Supervision 23. Nurse Nutrition
2. Number of supervisory visits by implementer B4. Technical staff
2. Number of supervisory visits by other 24. Psychiatrist
22. Physiotherapist
21. Pharmacist
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Hospital Status Report GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HSR - Page 2 of 4 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
D. Equipment list
# Not Usable # Usable Type # Not Usable # Usable Type
30. Ob/gyn table 2. Computer
32. D&C set 2. Printer
32. Minor surgical set 3. Stabilizer
33. Laparatomy set 4. Radio
34. Caesarean/hysterectomy set 2. Telephone
32. Obstructed labour set 1. Water purification
31. Episiotomy set 7. Fire extinguishers
37. Amputation set 3. Vehicle, 4 wheel drive
33. Laryngoscope set 9. Ambulance, 4 wheel drive
39. Endo-tracheal introducer 20. Vaccine Refrigerator
40. Vacuum extractor (childbirth) 22. Blood refrigerator
42. Incubator Neonatal (Van Hemel) 22. Food refrigerator
42. X-Ray machine 23. Cooking stove
43. Infant warmer 24. Water heater
44. Ultrasound machine 22. Sphygmomanometer adult
42. Brown frame 21. Sphygmomanometer child
41. Microscope 27. Stethoscope
47. HB meter 23.Vision Chart
43. Urine sticks 29. Thermometer
49. Blood transfusion set 20. Child scale
20. Cross match test 22. Height measuring scale
22. Blood HIV test 22. Suction machine
22. Blood Hepatitis B&C test 23. ECG machine
23. VDRL test 24. Fetal stethoscope
24. Glucose Test (strip) 22. Ambubag & Guedel
22. NG tube (child size) 21. Operating table & accessories
21. Measurement board 27. Otoscope
27. Fetal Heart Monitoring Machine 23.Phototherapy Machine
29. Autoclave
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Hospital Status Report GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
HSR - Page 4 of 4 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
E. Services provided
community facility E1.Surgery community facility E4. Maternal Health community facility E0. General Curative
2. Closed fractures and dislocations 2. Antenatal care 2. Curative OPD
(minor)
2. Lacerations and soft tissue injury 2. TT immunization 2. IMCI implemented
3. Acute osteomyelitis 3. Basic EmOC 3. ARI Case Management
4. Rheumatoid arthritis 4. Comprehensive 4. DD Case Management
EmOC
2. Amputation 2. Blood transfusion 2. Malaria Case Management
1. Burns 1. Blood storage 1. Minor surgery (I&D, suture)
7. Superficial abscesses, cysts and tumors 7. Neonatal resuscitation 7. Major surgery
E8. Mental health E5.Family planning 3. Detoxification of Substance
Abuse services
2. Common Mental Disorder 2. Oral contraceptives E3. Child Health
2. Severe Mental Disorder 2. Injectable 2. Routine Growth Monitoring
contraceptives
E0. IEC Activities 3. IUD 2. inpatient treatment of severe
malnutrition
2. Obstetric complications & birth 4. Condoms 3. Child Immunization
preparedness 2. Tubal ligation 4. Management of severely ill
child (IMCI)
2. Family Planning 1. Vasectomy E3. Infectious Diseases
3. Nutrition E1. Radiology 2. TB detection & referral
4. IMCI 2. Thorax x-ray 2. TB lab-diagnosis
2. Injection Safety 2. Abdomen x-ray 3. DOTS
1. Mental Health 3. Extremities x-ray 4. Malaria lab diagnosis
E01. Community Health Worker Supervision 4. Ultrasound 2. HIV/AIDS diagnosis
2. Health Posts active
2. Health Posts supervised at least twice
F. Remarks and observations
G. Report submission
Designation Signature
Date Name
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3.00. Catchment Area Annual Census Tally Sheet (CAAC)
3.00.0. Background
The CAAC has been introduced to improve the management capacities of the health workers
at all levels of the system. The BPHS and EPHS introduced the notion of coverage to
evaluate the impact of the proposed interventions. Coverage has been a key notion of the EPI
program in Afghanistan. Catchment areas (and catchment populations) vary with the type of
facility; the BPHS/EPHS state the recommended population to be covered by each type of
facility. In general, the catchment area is the area covered directly with services by that
facility. For a HP, the catchment area is the area directly covered by the one or two CHWs
working in that HP. This area may be a village or a part of a village, or several smaller
villages. At the HP level, the CAAC will also help the CHWs draw the community map for
their catchment area. For a HSC/BHC/CHC/DH out patient care, the catchment area is the
area directly covered by that facility and by the HP reporting to that facility. For DH inpatient
care, the catchment area is the district. For PH inpatient care, it is the province. The
catchment population is the population living in that area. Depending on targets defined for
different services, the whole catchment population or part thereof can be the target population
for certain services.
Purpose: The catchment area annual census (CAAC) identifies the total population and the
number of people in important age groups who require health services. These numbers are
essential to interpret data that is collected in health posts and health facilities and will be used
at the health post, health facility, provincial and national levels. In addition, from the CAAC
local death rates in these age groups can be determined so that health services can be
improved and fewer people will die. It also counts the number of couples who use birth
spacing methods and children who are fully vaccinated.
Who should do CAAC and where? CHWs and CHSs. CHW is doing CAAC in his/her
catchment area, and CHS is responsible for the immediate catchment area of a health facility.
Immediate catchment area here refers to the nearby areas of the health facility where no
CHW is needed. CAAC will not be conducted in areas where there is no CHW and no
immediate access to a health facility. If an area without immediate access to a health facility
not covered by a CHW is identified, this is indicative of the recent recruitment and training of
a new CHW for that area.
A Purpose: The CAAC pictorial tally sheet is used by the CHW and Health Facility (HF)
staff to collect information about the total population and the number of people by age group
who are living in the catchment area of the health post (HP) and HF. Because there may be
more than 2 CHW per health post there may be more than 2 CAAC pictorial tally sheet per
HP.
B. Process: The CAAC pictorial tally sheet is a tally sheet for the entire catchment area of
the health post (HP) and immediate catchment area of the health facility (HF). The
information is recorded by the CHW and HF staff during the first visit to a house. Each house
in the catchment area must be visited for census by the CHW once during the first 3 months
of each Shamsi year. At that same visit on another piece of paper the CHW will record
207
information for the community map because this information is different from CAAC
information. Once the data collection completed, CAAC tally sheet will be collected by the
CHS who will sum the totals for each box on a CAAC Report (CAACR). Once all houses in
the catchment area have been visited, the census is complete for that year. A new one will
begin the following year at the beginning of the Shamsi year. If during the 3 months there is
insufficient space on the tally sheet, a second tally sheet can be used, but please be sure to
mark the same year on the two forms.
C. Detailed instructions
Year: The Shamsi year will be written by the CHS when the form is distributed to the CHW.
District Name and ID: Both the name of the district and the ID number will be recorded by
the CHS on each tally sheet.
Health Facility Name and ID: Both the name of the health facility (HF) and the ID number
will be recorded by the CHS on each tally sheet.
Health Post Name/ID: Both the name of the health post and the ID number will be recorded
by the CHS on each tally sheet.
CHW Name/ID: Both the name of the CHW and their ID number will be recorded by the
CHS on each tally sheet.
Number of living Children: Record the number of living children in each age group who
live in the house. Do not record those who died in this box. If the mother is unsure of the
age, ask questions about when the child was born in relation to community events that
occurred approximately 2 year ago or 2 years ago e.g. Eid. If the information is too difficult
to obtain, look at the child and assess into which age group the child fits. Use the activities
listed in each age category to help you.
203
22-23 months: Record the number of children living in the house
4erdfcfdre42 who were born between 2 and 2 years ago and who are
less than 2 years old and more than 22 months old. The young ones
in this age group can pull themselves up to a standing position and
the older ones can walk. Do not record children less than 22 months
here.
Deaths during the last year: At each house record the number of
deaths in each age group during the 22 months before your visit to the
house. At each visit to a house ask about the 22 month period before
your visit. Note that <2 death includes neonatal death (on the 2nd page of
this tally-sheet). For example, if there is a neonatal death in a household,
tally it twice, in the <2 death and neonatal death.
Maternal and Neonatal death: For this part only record deaths of
mothers and babies that occurred as mentioned below.
209
Number of maternal deaths in the last year: At each household record
the number of women who were living in the house and who died while
pregnant or giving birth or within 1 weeks (42 days) after giving birth.
Record only the women who died during the 22 months before your visit
to the household anywhere from any cause related to or aggravated by the
pregnancy or its management but not from accidental or incidental causes.
Number of baby deaths less than 23 days old: At each house record
the number of babies who died in the household within 23 days of
being born. Record only the babies who died anywhere during the 22
months before your visit to the household. Note that this is part of <2
death (on the 3rd page of this tally-sheet). For example, if there is a
neonatal death in a household, tally it twice, in the <2 death and
neonatal death.
220
3.00.2. CAAC - Form
Tally Sheet CAAC GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 0 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year |_|_|_|_| District name and ID: ________________ HF Name and ID:_________________
Health Post Name and ID: __________________ CHW Name and ID: ___________
Number of Household Household
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
Number of people in this household Population
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
222
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000 00000
00000
Tally Sheet CAAC GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 3 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year |_|_|_|_| District name and ID: ________________ HF Name and ID:_________________
Health Post Name and ID: __________________ CHW Name and ID: ___________
222
Number Living Age group
223
Tally Sheet CAAC GOVERNMENT OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF AFGHANISTAN
Page 2 of 2 MINISTRY OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Year |_|_|_|_| District name and ID: ________________ HF Name and ID:_________________
Health Post Name and ID: __________________ CHW Name and ID: ___________
222
3.03. Catchment Area Annual Census Report – HP (CAACR)
2.22.2 CAACR – Guidelines for use
A. Purpose: The purpose of the CAACR is to combine the CAAC information for each
health post.
B. Process: The CAACR will be completed by the CHS during the 4th month of the Shamsi
calendar. One CAACR will be used for each health post. The CHS will sum all CAAC
pictorial tally sheets pertaining to one health post. After 3 months the CHS will take the
CAAC tally sheet from the CHWs. A new CAAC pictorial tally sheet will be provided to all
CHWs at the start of the Shamsi calendar. One copy of CAACR is kept by CHW for his/her
use and the second copy is sent to HF for aggregation.
C. Detailed instructions
Ensure that all the identifying information for the CAAC is completed – the year of the
pictorial CAAC. Include the district name and code, and the province name and code. Write
the health facility name and code as well as the health post name and code. Please see
example below:
2.Year
2339
2. District Code & Name 2. Province Code & Name
3811 Waras 23 Bamyan
3. Facility Code 3. Facility Name
0140 Band Kosa
4. Health Post Code 4. Name of Health Post
2115 Daraz Qul
2
For each item on the CAAC pictorial tally sheet, calculate the total and write it in each box.
For each item calculate a combined total of all the CAAC pictorial tally sheets pertaining to
the health post. Transfer the number to the appropriate item on the CAAC Report.
For example: For each health post count the number of household and population and
similarly add together the number of living children less than 22 months old from all the
CAAC pictorial tally sheets pertaining to that health post. Suppose there are 2 CHWs for a
health post and they provided 2 different pictorial tally sheets. On the first sheet there are 32
children aged less than 22 months and on the second CAAC there are 22 children aged less
than 22 months. The total number of children less than 22 months old for that health post is
22+32=10. Write “10” next to 22.2. on the CAACR (below). Repeat for the other age
groups. Once this is complete, add the numbers for all 3 age groups to get a total number of
children under 2 years of age. In this example the total is 10+90+220=210.
221
22. Number of Living Children
10 22.2. Number of children less than 22 months old
90 22.2. Number of children 22-23 months old
220 22.3. Number 24-29 months old
210 22.4. Number of children less than 2 years old
Similarly, write the total number in each age group that are fully vaccinated next to 22.2.
Write the total number of deaths in each age group next to 23.2, 23.2 and 23.3. Similar to
what was done in 22.4, count a total of the numbers written in 23.2, 23.2 and 23.3.and write
it in 23.4. This represents the number of deaths in children under 2 years old.
The next topic is married women. Next to 24.2, write the total number of married women
from the pictorial CAAC tally sheets. Write the total number of couples who use modern
birth spacing methods next to 24.2.
For 22.2 record the total number of women who died while giving birth or within 1 weeks
after birth.
In 22.2 record the total number of newborn deaths (babies less than 23 days old).
Write your name, ID code, and designation next to 21.2 and 21.2. Write the date the report
was written next to 21.3. Give the report to the health facility administrator.
227
3.03.3. CAACR - Form
21. Reported By
21.2. Name (ID)
21.2. Designation
21.3. Date
27. Comments
Any special activities or problems, significant anomalies or trends in morbidity and service delivery
223
3.02 Catchment Area Annual Census Report Health Facility (CAAC-AR)
A. Purpose: CAAC - AR provides CAAC information at the level of the health facility.
This provides denominator information for the health facility as well as selected indicators as
described previously.
B. Process: Community Health Supervisor (CHS) will collect all CAAC-R and once the
census is complete he/she will sum all CAAC-R to produce the aggregated report – CAAC-
AR. One copy of this report is then sent to HMIS at the provincial and national levels.
C. Detailed description
The form is very similar to the CAAC-R except that the information is aggregated at the
health facility level. The same items are used. No further description is provided here.
229
3.02.3 Catchment Area Annual Census Aggregated Report (CAAC-AR)
23. Reported By
23.2. Name (ID)
23.2. Designation
23.3. Date
24. Comments
Any special activities or problems, significant anomalies or trends in morbidity and service delivery
220
2.23.4 CAAC Information CHWs and CHSs May Find Useful
After the form is complete you can use the information to compare numbers from 2 year to
the next. Comparing the numbers is useful to identify if particular problems need to be
looked at more closely. To follow the information you can make a simple chart like the ones
below.
Number of infant deaths: This chart shows that there were fewer infant deaths in 2333
compared to 2337. Infant deaths increased again in 2339. What can be done to improve
this?
Number of Infant Deaths
7
6
6
5
5
4
3
2
2
1
0
1387 1388 1389
Year
Number of married couples using birth spacing: This chart shows that the number of
married couples who use birth spacing increased a lot from 2337 to 2333 and then it
decreased in 2339. What can be done to improve this?
70
Number of Couples Using
60
Modern Birth Spacing
60
50
40
40
30
20
10 3
0
1387 1388 1389
Year
For more detail on data use, please refer to the 2nd volume of this manual which is called data
use manual.
222
Annex 0 – Indicators for the BPHS/EPHS1
Not all indicators can be measured at all levels of the service delivery system, since not all levels are offering a complete range of services. The denominator of
several of the indicators needs to be adapted to reflect either out-patient or in-patient care where appropriate. The routine service reporting system can only
give proxy-indicators for the population-based indicators. Suggestions on how to calculate proxies are listed in Annex 2, the reference number (Ref) is the same
in Annex 2 and Annex 2
222
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
Total Couple year of protection (CYP) Number of couples received family planning services by health
22 HMIS Monthly
Reproductive Health
223
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
Vitamin A supplementation for children Proportion of children 1 to 29 months that have received vitamin A Annually/Bia
30 NRVA
aged 1-29 months supplement within last 1 months nnually
Proportion of under fives hospitalized for malnutrition that were Annually/Bia
32 Success rate of malnutrition management HMIS
discharged successfully nnually
Number of acute diarrhea all types in the Number of children under the age of 2 years who report at least three
32 HMIS Monthly
under 2 years by HFs loose stools in the last 24 hrs.
The number of new cases registered from measles in a specific year,
Measles Incidence rate (per 2007000
33 expressed per 2007000 population, for a given country, territory, or HMIS Monthly
population)
geographic area.
Number of children under the age of 2 years who report cough with
34 Number of pneumonia in the under 2 years HMIS Monthly
chest in-drawing and tachpneia.
Appropriate care seeking for childhood Percent of children with ARI, diarrhea measles, malnutrition or
32 AHS Annual
illness fever(malaria) seeking proper treatment
Number of children presented with measles cases during a given
31 Number of reported measles cases HMIS Monthly
period of time.
Case notification rate in new sputum smear The rate of new smear-positive TB pulmonary cases (AFB+) that are
37 HMIS Quarterly
positive pulmonary TB cases (from HMIS) reported in a given period of time.
No. of CHCs, DHs, and PHs offering active Number and percentage of CHC, DH and PH that offered diagnosis and
33 HMIS Quarterly
diagnosis and treatment of TB treatment to at least one TB patient during the quarter
39 New TB suspected cases reported Number of TB suspected cases reported by health facilities HMIS Quarterly
Tuberculosis
224
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
Malaria Slide or rapid diagnostic testing
42 Percentage of malaria positive slides among all slides taken. HMIS Quarterly
positivity rate
Malaria
Percentage of the total number of HIV positive blood units amongst Blood
49 HIV seroprevalence amongst blood donors Quarterly
the total number of blood units donated. Bank
HIV/AI
20 Estimated number of PLHIV Annual estimated number of people living with HIV Annual?
DS
Reported number of people receiving ART Reported number of people living with HIV receiving antiretroviral HIV/AI
22 Annual?
therapy DS
Mental Health
Number of people accessing health facilities Number of people accessing health facilities for mental health
22 HMIS Monthly
for mental health services services
Percentage of BPHS and EPHS facilities with Percentage of BPHS and EPSH facilities has at least a female doctor or
22 HMIS Semiannual
at least one Female Health Worker midwife or female nurse.
Number of active health facilities registered with MoPH HMIS
21 Total # of active Health Facilities Registered HMIS Monthly
department
222
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
27 Number of active Provincial Hospitals Number of provincial hospitals submitting HMIR HMIS Monthly
23 Number of active District Hospitals Number of district hospitals submitting HMIR HMIS Monthly
29 Number of active CHC Number of CHCs that submits MIAR HMIS Monthly
10 Number of active BHC Number of BHCs that submits MIAR HMIS Monthly
12 Number of active Sub-HC Number of Sub-HCs that submits MIAR HMIS Monthly
Number of active Mobile Health Team
12 Number of MHTs that submits MIAR HMIS Monthly
(MHT)
13 Number of active Health Posts (HPs) Number of health posts reported in MAAR HMIS Monthly
Proportion of health facilities with an active Proportion of health facilities that have community health shura that
14 HMIS Monthly
community health shuras meet on a monthly basis
12 Total patients/clients visit Total # of patients/clients seen by BPHS and EPHS HFs HMIS Monthly
11 Family visits by HPs Total # of families visited by CHW HMIS Monthly
17 Under 2 Patient visits by health post Total # of under 2 patients visit by health post HMIS Monthly
13 Under 2 Patient visits by health facility Total # of under 2 patients visit by health BPHS and EPHS facilities HMIS Monthly
Under 2 female Patient visits by health
19 Total # of under 2 female patients visit by health facility HMIS Monthly
facility
Over 2 Female Patients visits by health
70 Total # of over 2 female patients visit by health facility HMIS Monthly
facility
Number of Afghans who have access to
72 basic health services covered by contracts Number of people living in the areas covered by grant agreements HMIS annual
(Contractual Coverage)
72 Blood transfusion Capacity Proportion of facilities that are able to perform blood transfusion HMIS Semiannual
73 Functioning blood bank Proportion of facilities that have a functioning blood bank HMIS
74 Functioning laboratory Proportion of facilities that have a functioning laboratory HMIS Semiannual
221
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
Proportion of a given population that can be expected to use a
Population with access to local health specified facility, service, etc., taking into account barriers to access, Annual/
72 HHS
services usually measured within a 2 hour by walking to a health facility. Biannual
Definition determined by special MoPH committee.
Number of service delivery points providing
Number of service delivery points providing FP counseling and/or FP
71 FP counseling and/or FP products HMIS Monthly
products
Access to any public health facility within
77 one hour walking Number of people living within one hour walking to BPHS and EPHS NRVA
HFs
Percentage of provincial hospital registered with MoPH submitting
73 % of Provincial Hospitals submitting report HMIS Monthly
HMIR
79
Performance Monitoring
% of District Hospitals submitting report Percentage of district hospital registered with MoPH submitting HMIR HMIS Monthly
30 % of CHC submitting report Percentage of CHCs registered with MoPH submitting MIAR HMIS Monthly
32 % BHC submitting report Percentage of BHCs registered with MoPH submitting MIAR HMIS Monthly
32 % of Sub-HC submitting report Percentage of Sub-HCs registered with MoPH submitting MIAR HMIS Monthly
% of Mobile Health Team (MHT) submitting Percentage of Mobile Health Team registered with MoPH submitting
33 HMIS Monthly
report MIAR
34 % of BPHS Report Submission Rate Percentage of BPHS facilities registered with MoPH submitting MIAR HMIS Monthly
32 % of EPHS Report Submission Rate Percentage of EPHS facilities registered with MoPH submitting HMIR HMIS Monthly
Average # of people received health care
# of clients visit at BPHS and EPHS facilities (OPD patients visit and IPD
31 services daily through clinics and direct HMIS Monthly
admission)
Efficiency
outreach workers
37 No. of Active Beds available Number of available beds reported HMIS Simi annual
The number of hospital beds available per every 27000 inhabitants in a
33 Hospital beds per 207000 population population, at a given year, for a given country, territory, or HMIS Semi annual
geographic area.
227
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
39 No. of Admissions by hospitals Number of patients admitted as inpatients HMIS Monthly
Number of patients referred-in in to this facility by lower level HFs for
90 No. of Referrals served by EPHS and BPHS HMIS Monthly
needed health services
Number of inpatients died at the hospital after being admitted as in-
92 Number of hospital deaths HMIS Monthly
patient.
92 Number of Patients Days Number of patients days at hospitals within a given time. HMIS Monthly
93 Total Patients Discharged Number of patients discharged from hospital within a given time. HMIS Monthly
Number of surgical interventions reported at the hospitals in a given
94 Total Surgical Interventions HMIS Monthly
time
Average number of days that patients remain hospitalized. Calculated
92 Average length of stay HMIS Monthly
monthly.
The proportion of available beds that were occupied during a given
91 Bed occupancy rate HMIS Monthly
time
Proportion of surgical interventions that develops complications
97 Post operative complication rate HMIS Monthly
including infection, bleeding etc within 20 days of the intervention
93 No. of Cesarean Sections Number of c-section reported at hospitals in a given time. HMIS Monthly
99 Blood transfusion reaction rate Proportion of transfusions that have an incompatibility reaction HMIS Monthly
Percentage of BPHS health facilities with at
200 Proportion of BPHS health facilities with at least on essential stock out HMIS Monthly
Quality
223
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
Number of male participants by training Trainin
203 Number of male participants received training on a subject. annual
session within a given period of time g DB
The number of physicians available per every 207000 inhabitants in a
204 Physicians per 207000 population population, at a given year, for a given country, territory, or HMIS annual
geographic area.
The number of nurses available per every 207000 inhabitants in a
202 Nurse per 207000 population population, at a given year, for a given country, territory, or HMIS annual
geographic area.
The number of midwives available per every 207000 inhabitants in a
201 Midwife per 207000 population population, at a given year, for a given country, territory, or HMIS annual
geographic area.
Availability of recommended staffing
207 Proportion of facilities with recommended staffing HMIS Semi annual
according to BPHS and EPHS
Number of primary health care and health
203 Number of BPHS and EPHS health facilities per 207000 populations. HMIS Annually
centers per 20 000 population.
Demographic
229
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
% of Net primary school enrollment ratio he number of children of official primary school age (according to Annual/
227
Socioeconomic
NRVA
Male ISCED972) who are enrolled in primary education as a percentage of Biannual
the total children of the official school age population. also includes
% of Net primary school enrollment ratio children of primary school age enrolled in secondary education. or Annual/
223 NRVA
Female Enrolment of the official age-group for a given level of education Biannual
(primary) expressed as a percentage of the corresponding population.
230
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
% of Net secondary school enrollment ratio The number of children of official secondary school age (according to Annual/
229 NRVA
Male ISCED972) who are enrolled in secondary education as a percentage Biannual
of the total children of the official school age population. Or
Enrolment of the official age-group for a given level of education
% of Net secondary school enrollment ratio Annual/
220 (secondary) expressed as a percentage of the corresponding NRVA
Female Biannual
population.
232
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
General government expenditure on health General government health expenditure (GGHE) expressed as per Annual/
222 NHA
per capita (average US$ exchange rate) capita, US$ exchange rate Biannual
Total expenditure on health as percentage Sum of general government health expenditure (GGHE) and private Annual/
221 NHA
of Gross domestic product health expenditure (PvtHE) expressed as percentage of GDP. Biannual
General government expenditure on health General government health expenditure (GGHE) expressed as Annual/
227 NHA
as % of total health expenditure percentage of the total health expenditure (THE) Biannual
Out-of-pocket expenditure as % of total Out-of-pocket expenditure, expressed as percentage of the total Annual/
223 NHA
health expenditure health expenditure (THE) Biannual
232
Ref Indicator Definition Source Frequency
General government health expenditure (GGHE) expressed as
General government expenditure on health Annual/
229 percentage of the total general government expenditure (GGE) that is NHA
as % of total government expenditure Biannual
spent on health.
Ministry of health budget as % of Ministry of health budget expressed as percentage of government Annual/
230 NHA
government budget budget Biannual
Annual/
232 Total Life expectancy at birth PRB
The average number of years that a newborn could expect to live, if Biannual
he or she were to pass through life exposed to the sex- and age- Annual/
232 Male Life expectancy at birth PRB
specific death rates prevailing at the time of his or her birth, for a Biannual
specific year, in a given country, territory, or geographic area. Annual/
233 Female Life expectancy at birth PRB
Biannual
Percentage of live born infants that weigh less than 2200 g, for a given Annual/
234 Newborns with low birth weight % NRVA
time period. Biannual
Number of deaths of fetuses weighing at least 200 g (or when birth
weight is unavailable, after 22 completed weeks of gestation or with a
Annual/
Health Status
232 Prenatal mortality rate per 2000 live births crown-heel length of 22 cm or more) plus the number of early NRVA
Biannual
neonatal deaths occurring during the first seven days of life, per 2000
total births
Number of deaths during the first 23 completed days of life per 2000 Annual/
231 Neonatal mortality rate per 2000 live births live births in a given year or other period. NRVA
Biannual
Infant mortality rate is the probability of a child born in a specific year
Annual/
237 Infant mortality rate per 2000 live births or period dying before reaching the age of one, if subject to age- NRVA
Biannual
specific mortality rates of that period.
Under-five mortality rate is the probability of a child born in a specific
Annual/
233 Under-2 mortality rate per 2000 live births year or period dying before reaching the age of five, if subject to age- NRVA
Biannual
specific mortality rates of that period.
Maternal mortality ratio per 200000 live Number of maternal deaths per 200 000 live births during a specified RAMO Annual/
239
births time period, usually 2 year. S Biannual
233
Annex 3 – BPHS/EPHS Indicator Calculations Using the Routine HMIS
This annex lists examples of BPHS/EPHS indicators that can be calculated from the routine service reports of the HMIS, indicating which entries on what
report forms can be used for the calculation. For several indicators proxy indicators are also indicated. Proxy indicators are indicators that come close to the
listed indicator, but use a different numerator or denominator or both. Proxies can be helpful for indicators that either need population based surveys, or that
change only slowly over time. A proxy-indicator does not replace the indicator, it provides some indication whether or not things are moving in the right
direction.
232
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Number of couples received From MAAR, A2: Units distributed
family planning services and MAAR: Section A. Family Planning, A2. Units 2. Oral Contraceptives (pills)= number/22
23
protected for one year - by health distributed(2-3) 2. Condoms = ## *22/220
posts 3. Injections =## /4
MIAR: D. Stock status Essential Drugs, Oral
Proportion of service delivery contraceptive, Inject able contraceptive, Condom,
Count if all all/one of the methods are available in
24 points offering at least 3 modern IUD.
the health facility/HP separately
contraceptive methods MAAR: F. Status of Stock of Essential Drugs, F.3. Oral
contraceptive.
MIAR: Section C. Maternal and Neonatal care, C4.
Sum total number of neonatal deaths (MIAR,
Number of Neonatal deaths Neonatal Care, 4. Neonatal death
21 Section C, C4.4.neonatal death Plus HMIR, G3.4.
reported by clinics HMIR: G. Maternal & Neonatal, G3. Neonatal Care,
Neonatal death)
4. Neonatal death.
MAAR: Section B. Maternal Health, 4. Number of
Number of Neonatal deaths neonatal deaths Or Sum total number of neonatal death (MAAR:
27 reported at community by health CAAC: 22. Neonatal and pregnancy related death in Section B.4. Number of neonatal deaths) OR
posts the last 22 months, 22.2. Number of newborn CAAC: sum 22.2. Number of newborn deaths
deaths.
MIAR: Section C. Maternal and Neonatal care, C4.
Number of stillbirths occurred at Neonatal Care, 2. Stillbirth plus Sum total number of stillbirth (MIAR, Section C,
23
the clinics HMIR: G. Maternal & Neonatal, G3. Neonatal Care, C4.2.stillbirth plus HMIR, G3.2.Stillbirth)
2.Stillbirth
MIAR: Section C. Maternal and Neonatal care, C4.
Sum total number of Low Birth Weight (MIAR,
Neonatal Care, 2. Low Birth Weight plus
Section C, C4.2.Low Birth Weight plus HMIR,
HMIR: G. Maternal & Neonatal, G3. Neonatal Care,
G3.2.Low Birth Weight) dived by:
Proportion of lifebirths in health 2. Low Birth Weight
29 Sum of MIAR: Section C. Maternal and Neonatal
facility weighing <2200 gr MIAR: Section C. Maternal and Neonatal care, C4.
care, C4. Neonatal Care, 2. Newborn Alive
Neonatal Care, 2. Newborn Alive
HMIR: G. Maternal & Neonatal, G3. Neonatal
HMIR: G. Maternal & Neonatal, G3. Neonatal Care,
Care, 2. Newborn Alive
2. Newborn Alive
231
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Number of children less than 22
MIAR, Section E. Immunizations, E2. Childhood,2. Sum total number of 0-22 months from MIAR,
20 months of age who received
PENTA (0-22 months) Section E2.2. PENTA
Penta3 vaccines
Number of children less than 22
MIAR, Section E. Immunizations, E2. Childhood, 2. Sum total number of 0-22 months from MIAR,
22 months of age who received
Measles,( 0-22 months) Section E2.2. Measles
Measles vaccines
MIAR, Section E. Immunizations, E2. Childhood, 2.
Number of children between age
PENTA,( 22-23 months)
of 22 -23 months who are fully Sum total number of 22-23 months from MIAR,
22 CAAC: 9. Number of children fully immunized, 9.2.
vaccinated against Penta3 Section E2.2. PENTA
Number of children 22-23 moths old that are fully
vaccines
vaccinated.
Number of CBA women who MIAR, Section E. Immunization, E2. TT Immunization, Sum total number of TT2 vaccines from (MIAR,
23
received TT2 vaccine 2. Pregnant women + 2. Non-Pregnant women Section E2.2+2
MIAR, Section B. Nutrition status, B2. Moderate
Sum Total New from MIAR, B2. Moderate Acute
No of under 2 years old children Acute Malnutrition and B3. Severe Acute
24 Malnutrition + B2. Severe Acute Malnutrition +
who MUAC is yellow or red Malnutrition, plus
HMIR, B.2. Admitted
HMIR: B. Nutrition of under five, 2. Admitted
No of under 2 years old children MIAR, Section B. Nutrition status, B2. Moderate Sum Total New from MIAR, B2. Moderate Acute
22
who MUAC is yellow Acute Malnutrition Malnutrition
MIAR, Section B. Nutrition status, B3. Severe Acute
No of under 2 years old children Sum Total New from MIAR, B2. Severe Acute
21 Malnutrition
who MUAC is red Malnutrition + HMIR, B.2. Admitted
HMIR: B. Nutrition of under five, 2. Admitted
Proportion of under fives Sum total number of HMIR Section B. Nutrition of
HMIR, Section B. Nutrition of under fives,2.
32 hospitalized for malnutrition that under fives,2. Improved divided by total
Improved
were discharged successfully B.2.Admitted (B.2./B.2.)
237
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Number of children under the age MIAR, SectionA2. OPD Morbidity, Diarrhea, 4. Acute
Sum total number of diarrhea in MIAR, SectionA2.
of 2 years who report at least watery diarrhea, 2.Acute bloody, 1.W. Dehydration +
32 OPD Morbidity, Diarrhea, 4 ,2 , 1 + HMIR, F.2.
three loose stools in the last 24 HMIR: F. Cases and Death of priority diseases <2,
Diarrhea, Admit.
hrs. Diarrhea, Admitted.
233
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Number of new smear-positive
MIAR: G.Tuberculosis, Section G2.Case Detection,2. Sum total from MIAR, G2.2 Number of New
40 cases (AFB+) detected at the
Number of New Smear (+) Cases Smear (+) Cases
health facilities
MIAR, sum G2.2 Number of Cases Completed and
Smear (-) divide it by total G2.2 Number that
MIAR: Section G2.Case Detection,2. Number of New
Percentage of new patients with started treatment reported 3 quarter back (e.g. If
Smear (+) Cases and MIAR: Section G2.Treatment
42 sputum (AFB+) that started you are in Quarter 4th, go back to Quarter 2st of
complete and cured, 3.Number of Cases Completed
treatment, cured that year) e.g. if it has been reported in month 2st
and Smear (-)
Hamal, you will see the impact in month 20th
Jaddi.
Total sum of health facilities offered DOTS in FSR:
FSR: Section D4. Infectious Diseases, 3. DOTS
Proportion of health facilities with Section D4. Infectious Diseases, 3. DOTS PLUS HSR
42 HSR: E.Services Provided, E4. Infectious diseases,
DOTS services E4. Infectious diseases, 3.DOTS divided by total
3.DOTS
number of HFs reported FSR
Quarterly report on TB case registration: Block 1: All Quarterly report on TB case registration: Block 1:
Annual number of all forms of TB TB cases registered, Row: sum of Male and Female, All TB cases registered, Row: sum of Male and
43 Column: TOTAL All cases. Female, Column: TOTAL All cases.
cases (new + relapse) reported
1) Quarterly report on TB case registration: Block 1: Quarterly report on TB case registration: Block 1:
Annual number of notified TB All TB cases registered, Row: sum of Male and Female, All TB cases registered, Row: sum of Male and
44 cases, all forms (new + relapse) Column: TOTAL All cases. Female, Column: TOTAL All cases. Multiply by
,per 2007000 population 111,111/Total population of a given area
2) Total population of a given geographic area.
Total Male from MIAR F2.2. + F2.3 divided by
MIAR, F. Laboratory Exams, F2. Blood, 2. Total
Percentage of malaria positive total Male from MIAR F2.2
42 malaria slides examined and 2. Total PF positive and
slides among all slides taken. Total Female from MIAR F2.2. + F2.3 divided by
3. Total other positive
total Female from MIAR F2.2
Number of people presented with MIAR: F. Laboratory Exams, F2. Blood, 2. Total PF
Sum MIAR, F2.2.PF Positive + F2.3. Total other
47 Malaria during the given period of positive and 3. Total other positive PLUS
positive + HMIR, H. 21. Malaria
time. HMIR: H. New Inpatient Cases, 21. Malaria
239
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
MIAR, A2. OPD Morbidity, 27. Mental Disorders
Number of people accessing PLUS
Total number of by age and sex from MIAR A2.27
22 health facilities for mental health HMIR: H. New Inpatient Cases, 32. Common Mental
Mental disorders + HMIR, H.32 + H.33 + H.34
services Problems + 33.Substances abuse + 34. Severe
Mental Problems
240
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Number of active health facilities
Count number of active health facilities for the
21 registered with MoPH HMIS Facility history/common database
same month of deferent types of health facilities
department
Number of provincial hospitals Count number of provincial hospitals submitted
27 HMIR
submitting HMIR HMIR form in the given month
Number of district hospitals Count number of district hospitals submitted
23 HMIR
submitting HMIR HMIR form in the given month
Number of CHCs that submits Count Number of CHCs submitted MIAR in the
29 MIAR
MIAR given month
Number of BHCs that submits Count Number of BHCs submitted MIAR in the
10 MIAR
MIAR given month
Number of Sub-HCs that submits Count Number of Sub-HCs submitted MIAR in the
12 MIAR
MIAR given month
Number of MHTs that submits Count Number of MHTs submitted MIAR in the
12 MIAR
MIAR given month
Sum total number of HPs reported in MAAR in the
MAAR heading: Number of Health Post Submitted
Number of health posts reported given month from "Number of Health Post
13 MAAR OR
in MAAR Submitted MAAR" OR
CHW Database
CHW Database
Count number of health facilities with have at
Proportion of health facilities that least one meeting per month at MIAR: Section H.
MIAR: Section H. Community Health, 2. Number of
14 have community health shura Community Health, 2. Number of meetings with
meetings with community health committee
that meet on a monthly basis community health committee divided by total
number of health facilities submitted MIAR
Sum total new, < 2 and > 2, male and female and
Total # of patients/clients seen by MIAR: Patients/Clients
12 revisits from MIAR Patients/Clients PLUS
BPHS and EPHS HFs HMIR: A.Indoor patients, 2. Admission
HMIR, A.2.
Sum total from MAAR Total Number of Family
11 Total # of families visited by CHW MAAR heading: Total Number of Family Visited
Visited
242
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Total # of under 2 patients visit by MAAR: E2. <2 Morbidity and Mortality, 2. ARI,
17 Sum E2.2, 2, 3 <2 patients visit by health post
health post 2.Acute diarrhea, 3.Malaria, Treated
Sum both under 2 male and under 2 female
MIAR: Patients/Clients < male and female
Total # of under 2 patients visit by patients visit by health facility (MIAR,
13 HMIR: A.Indoor patients, 2. Admission <2 male and
health BPHS and EPHS facilities Patients/Clients + A.Indoor patients,
female
2.Admissions)
Sum under 2 female patients visit by health
Total # of under 2 female patients MIAR: Patients/Clients < 2 female
19 facility (MIAR, Patients/Clients + A.Indoor
visit by health facility HMIR: A.Indoor patients, 2. Admission <2 female
patients, 2.Admissions <2 female)
Sum > 2 female patients visit by health facility
Total # of over 2 female patients MIAR: Patients/Clients >2female
70 (MIAR, Patients/Clients + A.Indoor patients,
visit by health facility HMIR: A.Indoor patients, 2. Admission >2 female
2.Admissions >2 female)
Number of people living in the
Sum population under each NGO contract (there
72 areas covered by grant Grants summary
is no standard definition)
agreements
FSR: D. Services provided, D3. Maternal Health, 7.
Sum number of services delivery points reported
Proportion of facilities that are Blood transfusion
72 provision of blood transfusion in FSR: D3.7 + HSR:
able to perform blood transfusion HSR: E.Services provided, E4. Maternal Health, 2.
E4.2
Blood transfusion
Proportion of facilities that have a HSR: E.Services provided, E4. Maternal Health, 1. Sum number of services delivery points reported
73
functioning blood bank Blood Storage provision of blood storage in HSR: E4.1
FSR: D. Services provided, D4. Infectious Diseases, 2.
Lab diagnosis or 4. Malaria lab diagnosis
Proportion of facilities that have a Sum number of HFs reported D4.2 or D4.4 in FSR
74 HMIR: E. Services provided, E3. Infectious Diseases,
functioning laboratory and E3.2. or E3.4. or E3.2. in HSR
2. TB lab diagnosis or 4. Malaria Lab diagnosis, or 2.
HIV/AIDS diagnosis
Sum total from MAAR A2, #HP + from MIAR for
Number of service delivery points
MAAR: A.Family Planning, #HP which the um total New cases and Reattendance
71 providing FP counseling and/or FP
MIAR: C2.Family planning, 2-2 for C2.2 + C2.2 + C2.3 + C2.4 + C2.2 is greater
products
than zero
242
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Percentage of provincial hospital Sum all provincial hospital submitted HMIR in the
73 registered with MoPH submitting HMIR given period divided by total provincial hospital
HMIR registered with MoPH
Percentage of district hospital Sum all district hospital submitted HMIR in the
79 registered with MoPH submitting HMIR given period divided by total district hospital
HMIR registered with MoPH
Percentage of CHCs registered Sum all CHCs submitted MIAR in the given period
30 MIAR
with MoPH submitting MIAR divided by total CHCs registered with MoPH
Percentage of BHCs registered Sum all BHCs submitted MIAR in the given period
32 MIAR
with MoPH submitting MIAR divided by total BHCs registered with MoPH
Sum all Sub-HC submitted MIAR in the given
Percentage of Sub-HCs registered
32 MIAR period divided by total Sub-HC registered with
with MoPH submitting MIAR
MoPH
Percentage of Mobile Health Sum all Mobile Health Team submitted MIAR in
33 Team registered with MoPH MIAR the given period divided by total Mobile Health
submitting MIAR Team registered with MoPH
Percentage of BPHS facilities Sum all BPHS facilities submitted MIAR in the
34 registered with MoPH submitting MIAR given period divided by total BPHS facilities
MIAR registered with MoPH
Percentage of EPHS facilities Sum all EPHS facilities submitted HMIR in the
32 registered with MoPH submitting HMIR given period divided by total EPHS facilities
HMIR registered with MoPH
2. MIAR: Section A, Patients/Clients
# of clients visit at BPHS and EPHS -Under 2 male female Sum total number of OPD, IPD admissions and
31 facilities (OPD patients visit and -Over 2 male and female family visits of one month divide by number of
IPD admission) -re-attendance days of that month (if quarter, divide by 90 days)
3. HMIR: Section A. Indoor Patients, 2. Admissions
Number of available beds HSR A. General Facility information, 29. No. of beds Sum total number of bed from HSR A.29 (29.2 to
37
reported (29.2 to 29.2) 29.2)
243
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
The number of hospital beds
available per every 27000 Total number of beds divided by a population, at
HSR A. General Facility information, 29. No. of beds
33 inhabitants in a population, at a a given year, for a given country, territory, or
(29.2 to 29.2)
given year, for a given country, geographic area multiplied to 20000
territory, or geographic area.
Number of patients admitted as From HMIR: A2.Indoor Patients, 2. Admissions
39 HMIR: A. Indoor Patients, 2.Admissions
inpatients sum (All age and sex)
Number of patients referred-in in sum all Referred-in from A. Patients/Clients of
MIAR: A. Patients/Clients, Referred-in PLUS
90 to this facility by lower level HFs MIAR plus Referred-in from A.Indoor Patients of
HMIR: A.Indoor Patients, Referred-In
for needed health services HMIR
Number of inpatients died at the
From HMIR: A2.Indoor Patients, 2.2. Deaths sum
92 hospital after being admitted as HMIS: A. Indoor Patients, 2.2. Deaths
(<2 M + <2 F +=>2F+=>2M)
in-patient.
Number of patient days at From HMIR: A2.Indoor Patients, 3. Number of
92 HMIS: A. Indoor Patients, 3. Number of patient days
hospitals within a given time. patient days sum (<2 M + <2 F +=>2F+=>2M)
From HMIR: A2.Indoor Patients,
Number of patients discharged
93 HMIS: A. Indoor Patients, 2.Discharged/Outcome 2.Discharged/Outcome sum (<2 M + <2 F
from hospital within a given time.
+=>2F+=>2M)
Number of surgical interventions
HMIS: D. Other surgical interventions, sum Minor
94 reported at the hospitals in a HMIS: D. Other surgical interventions
and Major for all diseases
given time
Average number of days that Average length of stay in HMIR: A. Indoor
HMIR: A. Indoor Patients, 4.Average length of stay
92 patients remain hospitalized. Patients, 2.Average length of stay(<2 M + <2 F
mean (<2 M + <2 F +=>2F+=>2M)
Calculated monthly. +=>2F+=>2M)
The proportion of available beds HSR: HSR:A. General Facility Information, 29.No of Divide 3. Number of patient days of that month
91 that were occupied during a given beds and HMIR: A. Indoor Patients, 3. Number of by Sum of 29.No of beds, multiplied by 30. (HMIR,
time patient days (<2 M + <2 F +=>2F+=>2M) A.3/(HSR A.29.*30)
244
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
Proportion of surgical
interventions that develops
HMIR: D. Other surgical interventions and 9. Post (HMIR, D.9. Post operative complication/HMIR, D.
97 complications including infection,
operative complication 7.Total)
bleeding etc within 20 days of
the intervention
MIAR: C. Maternal and Neonatal Care, C3. Obstetric
Number of c-section reported at Care, C3.7. Cesarean section Sum MIAR, C3.7. Cesarean section, PLUS HMIR,
93
hospitals in a given time. HMIR: G. Maternal and Neonatal, G2.Family G2.2.Cesarean section
planning, 2. Cesarean Section.
Proportion of transfusions that HMIR:D. Other surgical interventions, 20. Blood
99 (HMIR:D.22/D.20)
have an incompatibility reaction transfusion and 22. Blood transfusion reaction
Proportion of BPHS health
Count number of health facilities reported MIAR:
200 facilities with at least on essential MIAR: D. Stock status Essential Drugs
D. Stock status Essential Drugs, sum (<22)
stock out
242
No. Definition Source of data Calculation
The number of midwives available
FSR: B. Human Resources, B2. Facility staff Status, 3.
per every 207000 inhabitants in a
Midwife, 4. Community Midwife and (FSR,B2.3.+B2.4.+ HSR, B3.22/Total population of
201 population, at a given year, for a
HSR: B. Human Resources, B2. Management, B3.22. given area)*20000
given country, territory, or
Midwifes.
geographic area.
Check number of BPHS and EPHS HFs reported B.
Proportion of facilities with HMIS, Facility Status Report and Hospital Status
207 Human Resources according to BPHS and EPHS
recommended staffing Report
staffing recommendations for each type of HF.
Number of BPHS and EPHS health Total number of SHCs , BHCs , CHCs and DHs per
203 HMIS common
facilities per 207000 populations. total population multiplied to 207000
241
Annex 2 – Definition of Terms (Including Standard Case
Definitions)
New Patient: any patient who comes to the clinic for a new disease episode or check-up.
This includes patients who have been diagnosed in another facility and referred to this
facility. It also includes patients who have previously been diagnosed at this facility, are
coming back for follow-up but also present a new illness (or case).
Re-attendance Patient: any patient who comes to the facility for follow-up care or check-
ups and does not present a new illness (or case).
New case: a patient is diagnosed with an episode of an illness for the first time in this health
facility. Many problems are of short duration and can be recorded as a new case the next
time a patient comes to the same facility with the same diagnosis. Several problems last
longer, if not a lifetime. The table below gives the time that should elapse before a patient
presenting with the same disease at the same facility can be considered a “new case.” A
patient referred from another facility is considered a “new case” in the facility to which (s)he
has been referred.
Case Duration
Medical Cases 0 3 2 0 3 2 1 0 Life
Week Weeks Weeks Month Mths Mths Mths Yrr Long
Allergic rhinitis
Amebiasis
Anemia iron
definciency
Arthritis
Asthma
Bronchiectasis
Bronchitis acute
Bronchitis Chronic
Candidiasis
Cellulitis
Chicken pox
Colicystitis (non-
lithiasis)
Conjunctivitis
Contact Dermatitis
COPD
Cough & Cold
Cystitis acute
Dental abscess
Dental infection
Depression
247
Case Duration
Medical Cases 0 3 2 0 3 2 1 0 Life
Week Weeks Weeks Month Mths Mths Mths Yrr Long
Diabetes
Diarrhea acute watery
Diarrhea with
Dehydration
Diphtheria
Dysentery
Eczema
Epiglottitis
Epilepsy
Flaccid paralysis –
Acute
Gastritis
Giardiasis
Gingivitis
Helminthiasis
Hemorrhoid
Herpes simplex (2st
onset)
Herpes zoster
HIV/AIDS
Hypertension
Impetigo
Laryngitis
Leishmaniasis
cutanious
Malaria
Malnutrition Moderate
Acute
Malnutrition Severe
Acute
Mastitis
Mastoiditis
Measles
Meningitis/Encephalitis
Mumps
Nephritis
Night-blindness (Vit-A)
Osteoarthritis
Osteomylitis
Otitis E terna
Otitis media acute
Peptic Ulcer
Pertusis
243
Case Duration
Medical Cases 0 3 2 0 3 2 1 0 Life
Week Weeks Weeks Month Mths Mths Mths Yrr Long
Pharyngitis
PID
Pneumonia
Prostatitis
Psoriasis
Pyoderma
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Ringworm
Salpingitis
Scabies
Scurvy
Sinusitis acute
Stomatitis
Tetanus
Tetanus Neonatal
Tonsillitis acute
Trachoma
Tuberculoses
Typhoid Fever
UTI
Vaginitis
Vitiligo
Viral Hepatitis
Re-attendance case: also sometimes referred to as “old case”. Patients seen for follow-up of
a specific health problem previously diagnosed at the same facility. This includes patients
presenting with the same problem within the period that should elapse to be considered a new
case. It does not include patients referred from another facility, who are noted as “new cases”
in this facility. One patient can have several “cases,” e.g., a patient previously diagnosed
with malaria coming back for checkup is newly diagnosed with a skin infection; the patient
is marked as “new” patient, as “re-attendance” for malaria and “new” for skin - infection
diagnoses
Referred in: patients who have been referred to this facility by another facility or by HPs
Referred out: a patient who has been referred to another facility for more specialized
services
Nutrition: A child that comes for the first time for check-up at this facility is tallied as
“new.” A child coming back for a check-up within 3 months of a previous visit is tallied as
“Re-attendance.” If a child comes back more than 3 months after a previous check-up, it is
tallied as “New.”
249
Family planning new case: For family planning, this corresponds with a “new user” in FP
terminology. A “new case” for FP is:
A client who had never used a family planning method before and starts using one,
regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also marked
“new” in the Patient/Clients;
A client who discontinued (see below) a method and starts a new one, or re-starts the
same one, regardless of whether the client came to this facility before; this client is also
marked “new” in the Patient/Clients.
Are not considered “new case”, but considered “Re-attendance” under Family Planning:
A client who came to this facility for one method and switches to another method without
“discontinuation” as defined below in “Family Planning Discontinued”, is marked as a
“Re-attendance” for the new method. Remark that this client of course abandons the first
method, but she/he switches to the new method without interrupting the contraceptive
protection. This client is marked as “re-attendance” under Patients/Clients as well.
Also, a user who is using a method, but went previously to another facility for supplies, is
considered “Re-attendance” when she/he comes to another facility for renewal, without
discontinuing FP. This client is marked as “new” under Patients/Clients.
Family planning discontinued: a client is considered to have discontinued using the family
planning methods listed in the table below according to the boxed criteria:
Pills Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Pill users are given an appointment to come
back for a check-up and a new stock of pill cycles. If the user
does not come back on the date of the appointment, or within
30 days after the date of that appointment, she is considered
“discontinued” for oral contraception.
Injectables Did not come back for one month after the last scheduled
appointment. Injectable contraception users are given an
appointment to come back for check-up and a new injection.
If the user does not come back on the date of the appointment,
or within 30 days after the date of that appointment, she is
considered “discontinued” for injectable contraception.
IUD When an IUD is removed or ejected and no other method is
accepted.
Condom Did not come back for the last scheduled appointment.
Condom users are given an appointment to come back for new
supply of condoms. If the user does not come back on the date
of the appointment, or stops using condoms without starting
another method, she/he is considered “discontinued” for
contraception for condoms.
Family planning re-attendance: a user who comes for a new supply of the same family
planning method or one who comes for the initial supply of another method without having
discontinued (see above) the previous method, regardless of the fact that she/he received the
previous supply at this particular clinic.
IMPORTANT: If a patient is considered “new” for any reason, (s)he should be counted as
“new” in the row “Patients/Clients” e.g., a woman who comes for a postnatal follow-up visit
(re-attendance in “Postnatal visit”) and starts using Injectable contraceptives (“New Cases” in
“Injectable”), is considered “new” in the row “Patients”.
220
3. Case Definitions
Cases are only tallied by sex and age if it is a NEW diagnosis for that patient and meets the
case definition, otherwise they are only noted under “reattendance. Note that all case
definitions in the OPD are “clinical” and thus would be considered as “suspected” diagnoses
in most cases. Thus each diagnosis could be read as “Suspected diagnosis – new case,” for
example, “Anemia” would be considered “Suspected anemia – new case” and “Tuberculosis”
is “Suspected tuberculosis – new case,” etc. This should correspond to the final
diagnosis/classification of the health worker and the treatment given. For instance, if malaria
is suspected and treated even if the slide is negative, the diagnosis is “Malaria.” If the case
description refers to confirmed cases, as in some In-Patient Diseases, it will be explicitly
mentioned in the guidelines.
NOTE: One patient can be tallied under more than one case, both in OPD and IPD.
ARI Cold/cough: Common cold and cough, (no pneumonia). Running nose,
cough, and low grade fever. Any ARI not covered under
ENT or Pneumonia definitions and with the above
mentioned symptoms, for example, acute bronchitis,
trachea-bronchitis, etc... Most of these do not require
antibiotic treatment, unless proven to be caused by bacteria.
ARI – ENT Acute otitis media: Ear pain with red immobile eardrum or
otorrhea for less than 24 days.
Mastoiditis: Ear pain with swelling and pain behind the
ear.
Sinusitis: Pain and tenderness over the sinuses with
purulent nasal discharge.
Streptococcal pharyngitis / tonsillitis: Sore throat with
cervical lymphadenopathy or pharyngeal exudates, and the
diagnosis is not Diphtheria.
Pharyngeal abscess: Sore throat with not being able to
drink.
Epiglottitis: Sudden onset of sore throat, hoarseness,
stridor, drooling, fever > 39C, and difficulty swallowing
and breathing.
(External otitis: Classify as “Skin - infection”)
ARI - Pneumonia In children <2:
Cough with chest indrawing and / or fast breathing:
- ≥ 10 /min in infants <2 months,
- above 20/min in infants 2-22 months,
- above 40/min in children > 2 year,
In adults: crepitation or bronchial sounds on chest
auscultation.
Bronchiolitis is included here
Diarrhea - Acute watery Acute gastroenteritis, at least three loose stools in last 24
without dehydration hours, with or without fever, with or without mucous in the
stool, without dehydration, without blood in the stool,
222
duration less than two weeks.
Diarrhea - Acute bloody Acute bloody diarrhea with visible blood in the stool
without dehydration without dehydration. May be bacillary or amebic.
Diarrhea - Acute with Acute diarrhea of any type with dehydration. Suspect
dehydration cholera if severe dehydration or death from acute watery
diarrhea in a patient aged five years or more
Severely Ill Patient Any child <2 that has one of the following alarm signs:
- Diminished consciousness or unconscious
- Convulsions
- Pneumonia with stridor
- Meningitis, meningo-encephalitis, stiff neck
Any patient with high fever, meningitis, meningo-
encephalitis, gastro-intestinal perforation and bleeding,
shocks, persistent diarrhea with or without dehydration,
unable to suck or drink, and any condition severely altering
consciousness or vital signs, to the extent that
hospitalization is required.
Acute Viral Hepatitis An acute illness that includes acute jaundice, anorexia,
nausea, malaise, extreme fatigue dark urine and right upper
quadrant tenderness.
Measles: Any person with fever of auxiliary temperature 37.2C or
above during 3 days and maculopapular (i.e. non-vesicular)
generalized rash and one of these: cough, coryza (i.e. runny
nose) or red eyes.
Or any person in whom a clinician suspects measles
infection.
Pertussis: A person with a cough lasting at least two weeks with at
least one of the following:
Paroxysms of coughing,
inspiratory “whoop”,
post-tussive vomiting (vomiting immediately after
coughing),
and without other apparent cause.
Diphtheria: A person with laryngitis or pharyngitis or tonsilitis, and an
adherent membrane of the tonsils, pharynx and/or nose.
Neonatal Tetanus: Any neonate with a normal ability to suck and cry during
the first two days of life and who between 3-23 days of age
cannot suck normally, and becomes stiff or has convulsions
or both.
Tetanus: Disease characterized by hypertonia esp. of the extensor
muscles (manifested by lock jaw, rhisus sardonicus,
opisthotonus, etc), involuntary muscle spasm, no
consciousness alterations, usually fatal if untreated, caused
by the tetanus bacillus which enters through a wound. Age
above one month.
Acute flaccid paralysis: Any child under fifteen years of age with acute flaccid
paralysis including Guillain Barre syndrome, or any person
with paralytic illness at any age when poliomyelitis is
suspected.
Malaria Fever with any of the following: chills, sweats, myalgia,
222
back pain, headache, nausea, vomiting. Sometimes the
fever is periodic – cold stage, hot stage, sweating stage.
In uncomplicated falciparum malaria, diarrhea and cough
are common.
Vivax has a chronic relapsing course associated with anemia
and splenomegaly.
Falciparum may lead to coma and death or may show
resistance to anti-malarials
If laboratory, provide a separate tally as P. Falciparum or P.
Vivax in the lab section
Typhoid Continuous high fever with any of the following: relative
bradycardia, rose spots, prostration, diarrhea or constipation,
abdominal pain, splenomegaly.
If laboratory, a patient with fever and leucopenia and
positive Widal test on the 3th-20th day.
Urinary Tract Infections Either upper or lower UTI, urinary frequency, dysuria,
urgency, suprapubic pain, with or without fever, with or
without loin or flank pain or costovertebral angle tenderness
If laboratory, urine exam shows WBC++, RBC + / -
Mental Disorders Anxiety, Depression, Paranoia, Hallucinations, Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder, psychosomatic disease,
insomnia, panic, hysteria, etc. which is the chief reason for
the visit.
Trauma Injuries and burns, from all causes (mines, wounds,
fractures, concussions, cuts, luxations, frostbite)
Suspected Tuberculosis Any patient with cough lasting for 2 weeks or more, other
common signs are blood in sputum, significant weight loss,
fever/night sweats, Fatigue, Chest pain. (See NTP
Tuberculosis Guidelines2020)
Peptic Disorder Any condition linked to problems with gastric disorder:
heartburn, dyspepsia, gastritis, peptic ulcer, esophageal
reflux.
Note that perforated ulcer, gastrointestinal bleeding come
under 7. Severely Ill Patient
Musculoskeletal Arthralgia, arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, tendinitis, osteo-
conditions arthritis, back pain, low backpain, lumbago, sciatica,
torticollis, muscle pain, neck pain, osteomyelitis, etc…
Note that (suspected) bone fractures, luxations and torn
ligaments should be categorized under Trauma
Hypertension Any adult patient at rest with a diastolic blood pressure
persistently ≥ 90 mmHg and/or a systolic blood pressure
≥240 mmHg. “Persistently” refers to having 3 separate
measurements, at least 2 week apart each. But if a patient
with blood pressure ≥ 240/90 represents one or few of signs
and symptoms such as headache, dizziness, tinnitus, nausea,
vomiting and blurred vision in the first visit should be
counted as hypertension.
Anemia Patients suspected of anemia (general paleness, pale sclera,
weakness, tiredness, rapid breathing, palmar pallor) or with
laboratory confirmed anemia.
223
Gastrointestinal worms Patients suspected having any kind of worm, including mine
worm and tape worm.
Skin infection Any kind of skin infection: dermatitis, cellulitis, abscess,
external ear infection, scabies, impetigo, pyoderma, tinia,
panaris, skin parasite, hordeolum
Skin other Any other skin condition not requiring antibiotic treatment,
for which the patient consults: acne, eczema, skin rash,
allergic reactions, urticaria, psoriasis, …
Pelvic Inflammatory Inflammation of the uterus (endometritis), fallopian tubes
Disease (salpingitis), and/or tubo-ovarian abscesses. Often of
infectious origin (STD): mostly bacterial, but also viral,
fungal, or parasitic. But can also be of lymphatic origin, or
after delivery, miscarriage, abortion, and hematogenic.
Sexually transmitted Infectious vaginitis. Suspected or laboratory confirmed
disease gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamidia, herpes genitalis, ….
Note: when endometritis, salpingitis or tubo-ovarian
abscesses are suspected, classify as PID)
Eye infection Conjunctivitis, keratitis, trachoma,
Oro-dental Any infection, inflammation or other condition affecting the
oral cavity and teeth: caries, dental infection, gingivitis,
tooth ache, tooth decay, dental abscess, thrush
Micronutritient disorder All vitamins and minerals deficiency
Others All unlisted diagnoses including unclear diagnoses and
unlisted preventive visits such as also Mumps, chicken pox,
constipation, COPD, dysmenorrhea, hemorrhoids, renal
colic, undefined general symptoms like weakness, tiredness
etc. BUT NOT those included under Nutrition and
Maternal and Neonatal Care
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b. Other case definitions
Nutrition
Nutrition - No acute Number of children situated at 305 or above the median
malnutrition: weight for height curve. Green in MUAC.
Nutrition - Moderate Children that are situated between 70-795 of the median
acute malnutrition: weight for height curve. Yellow in MUAC.
Nutrition - Severe acute Children that are situated below 705 of the median weight
malnutrition for height curve, monthly total of the column “Severely
Malnourished” and/or bilateral pedal oedema. Red in
MUAC
Maternal health
Antenatal care visit A visit where a pregnant woman comes for check-up. The
visit involves the following activities:
- Checking of blood pressure and swelling of feet
- Checking of protein in urine (where possible)
- Checking general nutritional status, and anemia
specifically
- Provision of Iron-folate supplement, if it is applicable.
- Tetanus Toxoid: A pregnant women needs to receive at
least 2 TT injections before delivery, unless the women
has completed TT vaccines.
- Detailed discussion of the birthing plan
First visit: the first time a woman goes for pre-natal check
up for this pregnancy.
Other visit: any visit after the first initial visit of her
pregnancy, regardless whether or not this woman came to
this facility for the first visit or not.
NOTE: in the case a woman goes to Facility 2 for the first
ante-natal visit, she is noted “new” in Patients/Clients and
“first ante-natal visit” in Pre-natal and Post-natal care. If she
goes to Facility 2 for an other ante-natal visit, she is marked
“re-attendance” in Patients/Clients and “Other ante-natal
visit” in Pre-natal and Post-natal Care. If she goes to Facility
2 for another ante-natal visit, she is marked “New” in
Patients/Clients and “reattendance” in Pre-natal and Post-
natal Care.
Post-natal care visit The first contact within 42 days after delivery is considered
as a first PNC.
Assisted Delivery: Vaginal delivery that requires forceps or vacuum extraction
to complete vaginal delivery, without resorting to Caesarean
section.
Major obstetric Refers to 1 major causes of maternal death:
complications (0)Haemorrhage (ante or post-partum), (3)
Prolonged/obstructed labour, (2) Post-partum sepsis, (4)
Complications of abortion, (5) Pre-eclampsia/eclampsia,
(1) Ectopic pregnancy, (1)Ruptured uterus.
Maternal death : A maternal death is defined as the death of a woman while
pregnant or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy,
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irrespective of the duration and site of the pregnancy, from
any cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its
management but not from accidental or incidental causes.
Maternal deaths in the HMIS include both:
Direct obstetric deaths are those resulting from obstetric
Neonatal Care
Newborn alive All newborns that were alive at birth, even those that died
within minutes or hours after birth
Low birth weight (<3511 All newborns weighing less than 2200 grams at birth.
grams):
Neonatal complication: All neonates that were ill or presented other complications
(e.g. hypothermia, infection, sepsis, apnea, difficulty
breathing…).
Early neonatal deaths All newborns born alive that died in the facility or dead
body were observed by SBA at home delivery within 7
days of birth even when the newborn dies a few minutes
after birth. This should include all cases investigated by
staff from your facility, but not cases that are only reported
to you.
Neonatal deaths All newborns born alive that died within 23 days of birth.
This includes the Early Neonatal Deaths. It also includes
those death occurred at home delivery attended by skilled
birth attendants and dead body was seen by SBA.
Still births: The death of a fetus after 22 weeks gestation (or weighing at
least 200 g or with a length of 22 cm or more) before the
complete expulsion or extraction from its mother. Any child
that dies after complete extraction from its mother (either
vaginally or through cesarean section) is considered a
neonatal death, even if the child only lives for a few
minutes.
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c. Case definitions specific for in-patient care
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syndrome, hemorrhoids, colics, diverticulitis, fistula and polyps,
ascitis….. Note that several may require an entry under D. Surgical
Interventions
00 Abdominal Hernia All forms of abdominal hernias: inguinal, umbilical, …
31 Liver, gall bladder and All diseases of liver, gall bladder and pancreas, except diabetes mellitus.
pancreas This includes hepatitis, hydatid cysts of liver, cholecystitis,
cholelithiasis, pancreatitis. … Note that several may require an entry
under D. Surgical Interventions
30 Urinary tract infections All infections of the upper or lower urinary tract, including orchitis and
prostatitis.
33 Other Uro-genital disorders All uro-genital conditions not categorized under 21. This includes:
kidney and bladder stones, urethral stones, nephrotic syndrome, renal
failure, renal colics, prostate hyperplasia, varicocoele, hydrocoele,
hypospadias, ….. Note that many will require an entry under D.
Surgical Interventions
32 Pelvic inflammatory disease Female genital tract infection which includes endometritis, salpingitis or
tubo-ovarian abscesses are suspected
34 Dysentery (all types) All types of diarrhea with blood in the stool
35 Diarrhea (exc. dysentery) All types of diarrhea without blood in the stool
31 Malaria All types and stages of confirmed malaria and its complications
31 Tuberculosis All types and stages of confirmed tuberculosis and its complications
38 Typhoid All cases of typhoid and para-typhoid fever and its complications
30 Musculo-skeletal infections All acute and chronic infections affecting the bone (osteitis), bone
marrow (osteomyelitis), joints (septic arthritis), muscle (myositis, septic
fasciitis). Note that many will require an entry under D. Surgical
Interventions
21 Sepsis All other non-specified infections with generalized symptoms requiring
hospitalization, including septic shock, septicaemia, ….
20 Infectious others All other specified infections and infestations including brucellosis,
cutaneous and visceral anthrax, leishmania, rabies, measles, rubella,
flue. Note that several of these also need to be reported through DEWS
23 Mental common problems All mental disorders where the patient can carry out (be it with
difficulty) daily activities: depression, anxiety disorders, conversion
disorders, panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, phobias,
obsessive compulsive disorders
22 Substance abuse All conditions provoked by acute overdose or prolonged use of
addictive substances, like heroin, opium, cannabis, alcohol, ….
24 Mental severe problems All mental disorders where a person has lost contact with reality and is
severally handicapped in performing daily activities. This includes acute
and chronic psychosis, schizophrenia, schizophreniform disorders, post-
partum psychosis
25 Respiratory tract infections All respiratory infections from viral, bacterial or parasitic origin. This
includes pneumonia, broncho-pneumonia, bronchiolitis, bronchitis,
pleuritis, ….
21 ENT All conditions, infectious or other, acute or chronic pertaining to ears,
nose, and throat. This includes: middle ear infections, pharingitis,
tonsillitis, laryngitis, runny nose, epistaxis, sinusitis, mastoiditis, …
Note that external ear conditions and conditions of the skin of the nose
are put under “skin conditions”.
21 Other respiratory tract All non-infectious respiratory tract conditions that fall not under ENT,
conditions including: asthmatic conditions, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
non-infectious pleural effusions, spontaneous pneumothorax,
28 Eye conditions All conditions pertaining to the eye and its mucous membranes,
including conjunctivitis, dacryocystitis, trichiasis, trachoma in all its
stages, corneal scars and ulcers, foreign bodies, cataract, glaucoma, ….
20 Skin conditions All infectious and non-infectious skin conditions, including: dermatitis,
empyema, cellulitis, furuncles, carbuncles, skin abscesses, impetigo,
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phlegmone, warts, scabies, pemphygus, skin rash, urticaria, psoriasis,
athlete’s foot, tinea, favus, ….
41 Obstetric & Pregnancy related All conditions related to pregnancy and delivery, including permanent
male or female contraception. Note that each case will have at least one
entry under G. Maternal & Neonatal
40 Non-obstetric gynecological All conditions affecting the female genital tract, not classified under 22,
23 or 40. Note that many will require an entry under D. Surgical
Interventions
43 Neonatal conditions All conditions pertaining to neonates, including the birth of a normal
neonate, if it happens in the inpatient department. . Note that each case
will have at least one entry under G. Maternal & Neonatal
42 Musculoskeletal All non-infectious and non-traumatic conditions affecting, bones, joints
and muscles: rheumatic diseases, arthrosis, rheumatoid arthritis,
44 Surgical cases All cases not classified above that require surgical interventions. Note
that most will require an entry under D. Surgical Interventions
00 Other All conditions that are not classified under 2-44, including cancers and
tumors, congenital disorders, oro-dental disorders,
This is a useful (and perhaps the best) indicator available for comparative purposes. It is
calculated by multiplying the number of contraceptive procedures performed or units of
contraceptives distributed or sold during the year studied by the CYP conversion factor for
that method.
The CYP conversion factors attempts to determine the equivalent number of couples
protected for an entire year by a given quantity of contraceptives, taking account, whenever
possible, of recommended use frequency, effectiveness, frequency of sexual contact for
coitus-dependent methods, and wastage. Number of injections converts readily into estimates
of the time period over which contraceptive protection is conferred. Estimates of protection
provided by sterilization are dependent on the age of the person sterilized; however, average
values can be used. Estimates for the length of time IUDs remain in place also vary, but
generally fall within the range of 2.2-3.2 years. Other contraceptives, such as pill and
condoms, must be calculated on the basis of quantities dispensed or sold, and in the case of
condoms, on estimated coital frequency. Wastage is also a factor.
There are few reliable studies of contraceptive wastage. While there are strong indications of
high wastage in many public programs where commodities are provided free to the family
planning organization and the user, the amount of wastage appears to be significantly smaller
in the commercial sector and contraceptives social marketing programs. For the time being,
the HMIS uses the conversion factor associated with free condoms, free of charge.
Failure rates and frequency of intercourse vary significantly from country to country. Until
specific figures for Afghanistan become available, generally accepted estimates will be used.
For practical purposes, the CYP is converted into the number of Couple Months of Protection
(CMP) per unit of the procedure or product. This allows comparing effectiveness of birth
spacing interventions between regions, types of facilities, and implementing agencies month
by month.
The CYP and CMP per unit of the different methods as used in the HMIS are listed in the
table below:
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Method CYPs CMP per unit
Sterilization 22.2 220 per
procedure
IUD 3.2 42 per insertion
Depo-provera 4 injections = 2CYP 3 per injection
Oral Contraceptives 22 cycles = 2 CYP 0.3 per cycle
Condoms 220 Condoms = 2 CYP 0.03 per condom
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Annex 4 – Population estimates (0201, 3101-3100)
The numbers, rates and ratios in this table are given for the year of 2390 (2020-2022). Updates will be available from the MoPH/HMIS on a
yearly basis.
Women of childbearing age (22-49) (2) 272127427 Women between the age of 22 and 49 at any given time. For
Afghanistan this is 225 of total population: TP * .22
Women pregnant at any given time (2) 9777002 Number of pregnancies each year times the factor for duration of
pregnancy, knowing that a certain number of pregnancies lasts less than
9 months. The factor is set at .7. For Afghanistan:
((TP * .042) * 2.22) * .7
Women of child bearing age, not pregnant 472327421 The total number of women of child bearing age minus the number of
pregnant women at any given time. For Afghanistan:
(TP * .22) - ((TP * .042) * 2.22) * .7
Neonatal Mortality Rate 727320 The Number of Children that die before the age of 23 days per thousand
live births in a given year. For Afghanistan this is 10 per thousand
Infant Mortality Rate 2347727 The number of children that die before the age of 2 year per thousand
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live births in a given year. For Afghanistan, this is 222 per thousand
Child Mortality Rate 2927400 The number of children that die before the age of 2 years per thousand
live births in a given year. For Afghanistan this is 212 per thousand
Children under the age of 2 (2) 272127429 For Afghanistan this is 45 of total population: TP * .044
Children under the age of 2 272977240 For Afghanistan this is 205 of total population: TP * .20
Children under the age of 1 months 2327729 For Afghanistan this is 2.25 of the total population TP * .022
Children 1 months to 29 months of age 477247322 For Afghanistan this is 27.35 of total population: TP * .273
(2)
The proportion of all these groups is sometimes set at 45 of the total population, to simplify calculations.
(2)
The proportion of this group is sometimes set at 205, to simplify calculations.
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