| Literature DB >> 17922916 |
Heidi Hopkins1, Ambrose Talisuna, Christopher Jm Whitty, Sarah G Staedke.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Home-based management of malaria (HMM) is promoted as a major strategy to improve prompt delivery of effective malaria treatment in Africa. HMM involves presumptively treating febrile children with pre-packaged antimalarial drugs distributed by members of the community. HMM has been implemented in several African countries, and artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) will likely be introduced into these programmes on a wide scale. CASE PRESENTATIONS: The published literature was searched for studies that evaluated the health impact of community- and home-based treatment for malaria in Africa. Criteria for inclusion were: 1) the intervention consisted of antimalarial treatment administered presumptively for febrile illness; 2) the treatment was administered by local community members who had no formal education in health care; 3) measured outcomes included specific health indicators such as malaria morbidity (incidence, severity, parasite rates) and/or mortality; and 4) the study was conducted in Africa. Of 1,069 potentially relevant publications identified, only six studies, carried out over 18 years, were identified as meeting inclusion criteria. Heterogeneity of the evaluations, including variability in study design, precluded meta-analysis. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: All trials evaluated presumptive treatment with chloroquine and were conducted in rural areas, and most were done in settings with seasonal malaria transmission. Conclusions regarding the impact of HMM on morbidity and mortality endpoints were mixed. Two studies showed no health impact, while another showed a decrease in malaria prevalence and incidence, but no impact on mortality. One study in Burkina Faso suggested that HMM decreased the proportion of severe malaria cases, while another study from the same country showed a decrease in the risk of progression to severe malaria. Of the four studies with mortality endpoints only one from Ethiopia showed a positive impact, with a reduction in the under-5 mortality rate of 40.6% (95% CI 29.2 - 50.6).Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17922916 PMCID: PMC2170444 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-6-134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Search strategya
| Home management of malaria (HMM); |
| Home-based management of malaria; |
| Home-based management of fever (HBMF); |
| Malaria AND community-based, community-directed, community participation, community care, community health volunteer, community health worker, community health aide, village health worker, village health volunteer, volunteer, volunteer health worker, lay health worker, birth attendant, midwife, traditional healer |
a PubMed search conducted 10 June 2007
Figure 1Categorization of published articles identified by the search strategy.
Characteristics of published studies of home- and community-based treatment for malaria in Africaa
| Kenya | • Rural | • CHWs provided presumptive CQ treatment for free | • Volunteer CHWs supported by the village | • Overall and malaria-specific mortality | No obvious effect of providing CQ for treatment of malaria on mortality, fertility, or parasite rates |
| The Gambia | • Rural | • CHWs sold CQ for presumptive treatment | • Volunteer CHWs supported by the village | • Overall and malaria-related mortality | Treatment alone had no significant effect on morbidity and mortality from malaria |
| Zaire (DRC) | • Rural | • CHWs sold CQ at cost for presumptive treatment | • CHWs received "symbolic monetary reward" | • Malaria morbidity and mortality | No impact on malaria mortality, but two-fold reduction in malaria prevalence and incidence |
| Burkina Faso 1994–95 | • Rural | • Mothers trained to recognize illness and make decision to treat | • CHWs kept 0.6 US cents for each package sold | • Proportion of under-5 malaria cases recorded as severe in health centres | The proportion of severe cases decreased in the first year of the program; in the second year, the proportion decreased only in health facilities with drug coverage ≥50% |
| Ethiopia | • Rural | • Mother coordinators provided presumptive CQ treatment for free | • None mentioned | • Malaria-related mortality in children under age 5 years | Intervention associated with 40.6% reduction in overall under-5 mortality (95% CI 29.2–50.6, p < 0.003) |
| Burkina Faso | • Rural | • Mothers trained to recognize illness and make decision to treat | • Drugs sold with 10% incentive margin for CHW | • Proportion of malaria cases progressing to severe (as reported by mothers in annual cross-sectional surveys) | Risk of progression to severe malaria lower in children treated promptly with pre-packaged CQ (5%) than not (11%) (RR 0.47, 95% CI 0.37–0.60, p < 0.0001) |
aCHW = community health worker; CQ = chloroquine; RR = risk ratio
Figure 2Sites of published studies on the health impact of home- and community-based treatment for malaria in Africa. Two studies were conducted in Burkina Faso. The map, adapted from MARA: Mapping Malaria Risk in Africa [69], shows seasonality of malaria transmission in months per year, as in the key.