| Literature DB >> 17367518 |
Dejan Zurovac1, Mickey Ndhlovu, Nawa Sipilanyambe, Pascalina Chanda, Davidson H Hamer, Jon L Simon, Robert W Snow.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zambia was the first African country to change national antimalarial treatment policy to artemisinin-based combination therapy--artemether-lumefantrine. An evaluation during the early implementation phase revealed low readiness of health facilities and health workers to deliver artemether-lumefantrine, and worryingly suboptimal treatment practices. Improvements in the case-management of uncomplicated malaria two years after the initial evaluation and three years after the change of policy in Zambia are reported.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17367518 PMCID: PMC1832199 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-6-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Characteristics of health facilities and health workers during 2004 and 2006 surveys in Zambia
| N = 94 | N = 104 | |
| No (%) | No (%) | |
| Type of facility | ||
| Hospital-affiliated health center | 7 (7.4) | 6 (5.8) |
| Urban health center | 7 (7.4) | 8 (7.7) |
| Rural health center | 78 (83.0) | 87 (83.7) |
| Health post | 2 (2.1) | 3 (2.9) |
| Equipment available at facility | ||
| Weighing scale | 92 (97.9) | 99 (97.1)* |
| Thermometer† | 91 (97.8)‡ | 90 (88.2)* |
| Working microscope | 16 (17.0) | 18 (17.3) |
| Malaria rapid diagnostic test† | 0 | 65 (62.5) |
| Any test (malaria rapid diagnostic test or microscopy)† | 16 (17.0) | 76 (73.1) |
| Wall charts | ||
| Artemether-lumefantrine dosage chart† | 19 (20.2) | 78 (75.0) |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine dosage chart | 48 (51.1) | 39 (37.5) |
| Quinine dosage chart | 4 (4.3) | 4 (3.9) |
| Available drugs on the survey day | ||
| Artemether-lumefantrine (any non-expired tablets) | 48 (51.1) | 62 (59.6) |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (any formulation)† | 94 (100) | 96 (92.3) |
| Quinine (injection) | 68 (72.3) | 78 (75.0) |
| Quinine (tablets) | 74 (78.7) | 90 (86.5) |
| Chloroquine (any formulation)† | 71 (75.5) | 0 |
| N = 103 | N = 135 | |
| No (%) | No (%) | |
| Pre-service training | ||
| Clinical officer | 30 (29.1) | 38 (28.2)§ |
| Enrolled Nurse | 49 (47.6) | 52 (38.5) |
| Registered nurse | 4 (3.9) | 10 (7.4) |
| Other | 20 (19.4) | 35 (25.9) |
| In-service training including recommendations on the use of artemether-lumefantrine† | 26 (25.2) | 55 (40.7) |
| Possession of guidelines that included artemether-lumefantrine recommendations† | 60 (58.3) | 124 (91.9) |
| Frequency of supervision (past 6 months) | ||
| 0 visit | 14 (13.6) | 16 (11.9) |
| 1 visit† | 22 (21.4) | 56 (41.5) |
| 2 visits | 42 (40.8) | 52 (38.5) |
| 3 or more visits† | 25 (24.3) | 11 (8.1) |
* Denominator does not include two observations with missing value
† P-value < 0.05 using chi-square test of significance
‡ Denominator does not include one observation with missing value
§ The clinical officer category includes one physician
Antimalarial treatments for children with uncomplicated malaria presenting to all health facilities – change of practice between 2004 and 2006 surveys in four districts in Zambia
| Artemether-lumefantrine | 6 (1.1) | 0, 2.7 | 42 (10.7) | 5.4, 16.0 |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine | 422 (80.1) | 73.9, 86.2 | 266 (67.5) | 58.8, 76.2 |
| Quinine | 14 (2.7) | 0.8, 4.5 | 19 (4.8) | 2.0, 7.6 |
| Chloroquine | 1 (0.2) | 0, 0.6 | 0 | NA |
| No antimalarial prescribed | 84 (15.9) | 10.3, 21.6 | 67 (17.0) | 11.7, 22.3 |
| Artemether-lumefantrine | 149 (27.0) | 19.2, 34.8 | 231 (42.2) | 33.8, 50.7 |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine | 214 (38.8) | 30.9, 46.7 | 151 (27.6) | 19.9, 35.3 |
| Quinine | 26 (4.7) | 1.5, 7.9 | 38 (7.0) | 2.5, 11.4 |
| No antimalarial prescribed | 163 (29.5) | 23.3, 35.8 | 127 (23.2) | 17.9, 28.5 |
* Confidence intervals adjusted for cluster sampling
Antimalarial treatments for children with uncomplicated malaria presenting to health facilities with artemether-lumefantrine in stock – change of practice between 2004 and 2006 surveys in four districts in Zambia
| Artemether-lumefantrine | 6 (2.4) | 0, 5.7 | 42 (21.9) | 12.4, 31.3 |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine | 183 (72.1) | 61.0, 83.1 | 103 (53.7) | 39.7, 67.6 |
| Quinine | 9 (3.5) | 0.3, 6.8 | 6 (3.1) | 0.4, 5.9 |
| No antimalarial prescribed | 56 (22.1) | 11.6, 32.5 | 41 (21.4) | 12.7, 30.0 |
| Artemether-lumefantrine | 144 (41.0) | 31.5, 50.5 | 219 (58.6) | 50.2, 66.9 |
| Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine | 77 (21.9) | 15.4, 28.5 | 51 (13.6) | 7.1, 20.2 |
| Quinine | 8 (2.3) | 0.1, 4.5 | 14 (3.7) | 0, 7.9 |
| No antimalarial prescribed | 122 (34.8) | 27.2, 42.3 | 90 (24.1) | 17.4, 30.7 |
* Confidence intervals adjusted for cluster sampling
Correctness of artemether-lumefantrine dosage prescriptions – change of practice between 2004 and 2006 surveys in four districts in Zambia
| All children 5–24 kg (N = 48) | 39(81.3) | 2 (4.2) | 5 (10.4) | 2 (4.2) |
| 5–9 kg (N = 6) | 5 (83.3) | 1 (16.7) | 0 | 0 |
| 10–14 kg (N = 34) | 31 (91.2) | 1 (2.9) | 0 | 2 (5.9) |
| 15–24 kg (N = 8) | 3 (37.5) | 0 | 5 (62.5) | 0 |
| All children 5–24 kg (N = 380) | 338 (89.0) | 11 (2.9) | 28 (7.4) | 3 (0.8) |
| 5–9 kg (N = 149) | 143 (96.0) | 0 | 5 (3.4) | 1 (0.7) |
| 10–14 kg (N = 185) | 173 (93.5) | 10 (5.4) | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) |
| 15–24 kg (N = 46) | 22 (47.8) | 1 (2.2) | 22 (47.8) | 1 (2.2) |