"background": "Community health centres are critical for primary care delivery, yet robust methodological frameworks for evaluating their clinical performance are lacking, particularly in resource-constrained settings. Existing approaches often fail to account for the hierarchical structure of health data and inherent measurement uncertainty. ", "purpose and objectives": "This brief report aims to methodologically evaluate a Bayesian hierarchical modelling approach for measuring clinical outcomes within community health centre systems, using a Nigerian case study. The objective is to demonstrate the model's utility in providing nuanced, centre-specific performance estimates while formally quantifying uncertainty. ", "methodology": "We developed a three-level Bayesian hierarchical model. The core structure is defined as y{ij \ (nij, pij), with (pij) = \ + \ Xij + uj + vk, where uj \ N (0, \²) and vk \ N (0, \ᵥ²) represent random intercepts for health centres and their supervising local government areas, respectively. Model parameters were estimated using Hamiltonian Monte Carlo. ", "findings": "The analysis, based on a synthetic dataset constructed from typical programme indicators, demonstrates the model's capacity to produce shrunken, more reliable estimates for individual centres. For instance, the 95% credible interval for the posterior probability of a positive clinical outcome in one illustrative centre was 0. 62 to 0. 78, substantially narrower than the interval from a non-hierarchical model. The model successfully partitioned variance, indicating that approximately 15% of the total variation was attributable to differences between local government areas. ", "conclusion": "The Bayesian hierarchical model offers a statistically rigorous framework for evaluating clinical outcomes in community health systems, effectively handling multi-level data and providing probabilistic inferences that are directly actionable for health managers. ", "recommendations": "We recommend the adoption of this modelling approach by health systems researchers and monitoring and evaluation units to enhance the
Chinelo Okonkwo (Thu,) studied this question.