Literature DB >> 16103699

Antimalarial prescribing practices: a challenge to malaria control in Ghana.

B K Abuaku1, K A Koram, F N Binka.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study was conducted to determine antimalarial prescribing practices among prescribers in 2 of the 6 sentinel sites established to document antimalarial drug efficacy in Ghana in order to provide some explanation underlying chloroquine treatment failures in the country. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The study was descriptive combining both qualitative and quantitative designs. The qualitative design involved in-depth interviews of general prescribers in the Wassa West and Kassena Nankana districts using an interview guide. The quantitative design involved a review of Outpatient Department prescriptions of 100 patients clinically diagnosed as having malaria within the year 2000 in each of the 7 selected health care facilities.
RESULTS: The overall number of drugs prescribed per patient encounter was 4.3 in the Wassa West district and 3.0 in the Kassena Nankana district. The number of drugs per patient encounter was 5.4 and 3.7 in private and government health care facilities, respectively. The commonly prescribed antimalarial drug in all the health care facilities visited was chloroquine. However, only 9.8% of prescriptions in private health care facilities contained correct doses of chloroquine compared to 54% in government health care facilities (p = 0.000). Prescriptions containing chloroquine injections were least likely to have correct doses of chloroquine.
CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that although chloroquine remained the first-line drug in the treatment of uncomplicated malaria in the two districts, the level of appropriateness of doses prescribed was generally low. Inappropriate doses of chloroquine prescribed were more prevalent in private than government health care facilities, and among prescriptions containing injections.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16103699     DOI: 10.1159/000086931

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Princ Pract        ISSN: 1011-7571            Impact factor:   1.927


  11 in total

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2.  Exploring the relationship between chronic undernutrition and asymptomatic malaria in Ghanaian children.

Authors:  Benjamin T Crookston; Stephen C Alder; Isaac Boakye; Ray M Merrill; John H Amuasi; Christina A Porucznik; Joseph B Stanford; Ty T Dickerson; Kirk A Dearden; Devon C Hale; Justice Sylverken; Bryce S Snow; Alex Osei-Akoto; Daniel Ansong
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3.  Who sleeps under bednets in Ghana? A doer/non-doer analysis of malaria prevention behaviours.

Authors:  Natalie De La Cruz; Benjamin Crookston; Kirk Dearden; Bobbi Gray; Natasha Ivins; Stephen Alder; Robb Davis
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2006-07-25       Impact factor: 2.979

4.  Assessing the ownership, usage and knowledge of Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) in Malaria Prevention in the Hohoe Municipality, Ghana.

Authors:  Kunche Delali Nyavor; Margaret Kweku; Isaac Agbemafle; Wisdom Takramah; Ishmael Norman; Elvis Tarkang; Fred Binka
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2017-09-22

5.  Factors associated with treatment-seeking for malaria in urban poor communities in Accra, Ghana.

Authors:  Raphael Baffour Awuah; Paapa Yaw Asante; Lionel Sakyi; Adriana A E Biney; Mawuli Komla Kushitor; Francis Agyei; Ama de-Graft Aikins
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2018-04-16       Impact factor: 2.979

6.  Potential contribution of prescription practices to the emergence and spread of chloroquine resistance in south-west Nigeria: caution in the use of artemisinin combination therapy.

Authors:  Grace O Gbotosho; Christian T Happi; Abideen Ganiyu; Olumide A Ogundahunsi; Akin Sowunmi; Ayoade M Oduola
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2009-12-30       Impact factor: 2.979

7.  Why don't health workers prescribe ACT? A qualitative study of factors affecting the prescription of artemether-lumefantrine.

Authors:  Beatrice Wasunna; Dejan Zurovac; Catherine A Goodman; Robert W Snow
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2008-02-05       Impact factor: 2.979

8.  Self-reported use of anti-malarial drugs and health facility management of malaria in Ghana.

Authors:  Kwame O Buabeng; Mahama Duwiejua; Alex N O Dodoo; Lloyd K Matowe; Hannes Enlund
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2007-07-02       Impact factor: 2.979

9.  Why hospital pharmacists have failed to manage antimalarial drugs stock-outs in pakistan? A qualitative insight.

Authors:  Madeeha Malik; Mohamed Azmi Ahmad Hassali; Asrul Akmal Shafie; Azhar Hussain
Journal:  Malar Res Treat       Date:  2013-10-07

10.  Predictors of antibiotics co-prescription with antimalarials for patients presenting with fever in rural Tanzania.

Authors:  Mustafa Njozi; Mbaraka Amuri; Majige Selemani; Irene Masanja; Brown Kigahe; Rashid Khatib; Dan Kajungu; Salim Abdula; Alexander N Dodoo
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2013-11-27       Impact factor: 3.295

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