| Literature DB >> 18457582 |
Lalit K Das1, Purushothaman Jambulingam, Candasamy Sadanandane.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the Global Strategy for Malaria Control, one of the basic elements is early detection and prompt treatment of malaria cases, especially in areas where health care facilities are inadequate. Establishing or reviving the existing drug distribution centers (DDC) at the peripheral levels of health care can achieve this. The DDCs should be operationally feasible, acceptable by community and technical efficient, particularly in remote hard-core malaria endemic areas.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18457582 PMCID: PMC2390570 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-7-75
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Map of the study area.
Population, volunteers, DDCs and FTDs in high and low endemic villages
| Endemicity | No. Villages | Popn. | Anganwadi workers & centres | No. of * Village Volunteers | Total no. of DDCs | No. of FTDs |
| High | 112 | 27332 | 26 | 88 (24) | 114 | 16 |
| Low | 266 | 98107 | 104 | 193 | 297 | 31 |
*The discrepancy in the numbers of villages and DDCs is because of some villages having more than one DDC, manned by Anganwadi worker and village volunteer.
DDCs- Drug Distribution Centres.
FTDs- Fever Treatment Depots.
Figure in the parentheses indicates number of illiterate volunteers.
Reported reasons for not receiving treatment from DDCs
| No. of villages/DDCs surveyed | 457 |
| No. of fever cases interviewed | 3233 |
| No. of cases not received treatment from DDCs | 468(14.5%) |
| 1. Unaware of DDCs | 61(13.0) |
| 2. No relief with chloroquine treatment | 38 (8.1) |
| 3. Prefer injections | 35 (7.5) |
| 4. Unwilling to get treatment for infants | 42 (8.9) |
| 5. Negligence, waiting to be relieved from fever | 84 (17.9) |
| 6. Prefer to take medicines from PHC/ANM/MPW | 15 (3.2) |
| 7. Absence of volunteers at time of visit | 46 (9.8) |
| 8. Unwilling to take treatment for women who have delivered | 35 (7.5) |
| 9. Belief that tablets reduce fever in day time only | 15 (3.2) |
| 10. Volunteer was from a lower caste | 8 (1.7) |
| 11. No one to help to approach DDCs | 4 (0.8) |
| 12. No trust in DDCs | 65 (13.8) |
| 13. Prefer sugar coated tablets | 8 (1.7) |
| 14. No stock of tablets with the volunteer at the time of visit | 4 (0.8) |
| 15. Unspecified | 7 (1.5) |
PHC – Primary Health Centre.
ANM – Auxiliary Nurse Mid-wife.
MPW – Multi Purpose Worker
Figure 2Age group wise Annual Fever Incidence (A-high endemic, experimental villages, B-high endemic check villages, C- low endemic, experimental villages, D- low endemic check villages).
Figure 3Trends in month-wise fever and parasite incidence in the high and low-endemic villages of the experimental area (A-Fever incidence, B-Parasite incidence).
Figure 4Parasite prevalence in the study area (A-high endemic, cold season, B-low endemic, cold season, C- high endemic, dry season, D- low endemic, dry season).
Age group-wise number of deaths due to malaria in the high endemic experimental and check CHCs.
| Age group (In years) | Pre-intervention period (one year) | Intervention period Cumulative (for 3 years) | Post-intervention period (one year) | |||
| Check | Experimental | Check | Experimental | Check | Experimental | |
| <1 | 1 | 0 | 9 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| 1–9 | 4 | 0 | 27 | 0 | 14 | 0 |
| 10 & above | 4 | 4 | 17 | 3 | 11 | 1 |
| Total | 9 (1.4) | 4 (1.5) | 53 (8.2) | 3 (1.1) | 27 (4.2) | 1 (0.4) |
Figures in the parentheses indicate the number per 10,000 population.