| Literature DB >> 18637523 |
Peter J Winch1, Kate E Gilroy, Christa L Fischer Walker.
Abstract
Diarrhoea was estimated to account for 18% of the estimated 10.6 million deaths of children aged less than five years annually in 2003. Two--Africa and South-East Asia--of the six regions of the World Health Organization accounted for approximately 40% and 31% of these deaths respectively, or almost three-quarters of the global annual deaths of children aged less than five years attributable to diarrhoea. Much of the effort to roll out low-osmolarity oral rehydration solution (ORS) and supplementation of zinc for the management of diarrhoea accordingly is being devoted to sub-Saharan Africa and to South and South-East Asia. A number of significant differences exist in diarrhoea-treatment behaviours and challenges of the public-health systems between Africa and Asia. The differences in rates of ORS use are the most common indicator of treatment of diarrhoea and vary dramatically by and within region and may significantly influence the roll-out strategy for zinc and low-osmolarity ORS. The prevalence of HIV/AIDS and the endemicity of malaria also differ greatly between regions; both the diseases consume the attention and financial commitment of public-health programmes in regions where rates are high. This paper examined how these differences could affect the context for the introduction of zinc and low-osmolarity ORS at various levels, including the process of policy dialogue with local decision-makers, questions to be addressed in formative research, implementation approaches, and strategies for behaviour-change communication and training of health workers.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18637523 PMCID: PMC2740678
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Public-health settings* for the roll-out of low-osmolarity ORS and zinc supplementation for management of diarrhoea in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia
| Characteristics | Setting 1 | Setting 2 | Setting 3 | Setting 4 | Setting 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sahel Region Low ORS use, high burden of childhood malaria | Southern Africa High ORS use, high burden of HIV | Eastern and southern Africa Medium to high ORS use, high burden of HIV, and childhood malaria | South Asia Medium-high under-five mortality, low ORS use | South Asia High ORS use | |
| Examples | Mali, Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso | South Africa, Namibia, Botswana | Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi | Bihar State and Uttar Pradesh States, India | Bangladesh |
| <5 mortality rate/1,000 livebirths | 175–200 | 60–80 | 110–180 | 100–125 | 60–80 |
| Child health profile, Lancet series 2003 | Profile 2 | Profile 5 | Profile 4 | Profile 1 | Profile 1 |
| HIV prevalence | 1–6% | 20–30% | 4–20% | <1% | <1% |
| Malaria transmission | Endemic in areas with adequate rainfall | Limited areas of transmission | Endemic in areas with adequate rainfall | Limited areas of transmission | Limited areas of transmission |
| Rates of ORS use | 10–20% | 50–70% | 30–60% | 10–20% | >60% |
| Availability of ORS sachets | Often only available in health facilities and pharmacies | Widely available through public and private sectors | Widely available through public sector, less in private sector | Widely available through public and private sectors | Widely available through public and private sectors |
| Production of ORS sachets | Often imported, some local production | Multiple producers, many flavours and brands | Some local production, sometimes imported | Multiple producers, many flavours and brands | Multiple producers, many flavours and brands |
| Marketing of ORS sachets | Limited private sector marketing, limited MoH promotion | Some private sector marketing, some MoH promotion | Some private sector marketing, some MoH promotion | Visible marketing of different brands, some MoH promotion | Visible marketing of different brands, some MoH promotion |
| Population density | Generally low | Low density in rural, large urban population | Low in rural areas, growing urban population | High | High |
*Settings are not comprehensive; many countries do not fit one of these settings MoH=Ministry of Health; ORS=Oral rehydration salts
Percentage of children with diarrhoea in the last two weeks who received ORS in sub-Saharan Africa and South and South-East Asia as measured by DHS surveys, 1998–2006
| ORS-use rates (%) | Sub-Saharan Africa country and year of DHS survey (%: Country and year of survey) | South and South-East Asia country and year of DHS survey (%: Country and year of survey) |
|---|---|---|
| <20 | 12.4: Madagascar 2003/2004 13.1: Ethiopia 2000 13.6: Rwanda 2000 14.0: Mali 2006 15.1: Chad 2004 16.8: Cameroon 2004 17.1: Togo 1998 17.6: Niger 2006 18.2: Nigeria 2003 18.9: Burkina Faso 2003 | 17.8: Cambodia 2000 |
| 20–29 | 20.4: Senegal 1999 22.6: Mauritania 2000/2001 23.6: Côte d'Ivoire 1998/1999 24.8: Gabon 2000 29.2: Kenya 2003 | 28.8: India 1998–1999 |
| 30–39 | 33.5: Uganda 2000/2001 34.5: Guinea 1999 38.6: Ghana 2003 | 32.2: Nepal 2001 38.8: Pakistan 1990/1991 35.5: Indonesia 2002/2003 |
| 40–49 | 44.7: Eritrea 2002 47.9: Malawi 2000 48.5: Mozambique 2003 | 40.0: Viet Nam 2002 42.2: The Philippines 2003 |
| 50–59 | 51.2: South Africa 1998 53.2: Zambia 2001/2002 53.9: Tanzania 2004–2005 | |
| 60–69 | 61.1: Namibia 2000 | 67.7: Bangladesh 2004 |
DHS=Demographic and health survey; ORS=Oral rehydration salts
Effects of malaria and HIV/AIDS on introduction of zinc and low-osmolarity ORS for diarrhoea
Policy Effects on policy-makers and the process of policy dialogue | Competition for attention of policy-makers where HIV and malaria demand a large portion of their time Low priority assigned to diarrhoeal diseases compared to HIV and malaria Concern that zinc treatment might affect clinical course of AIDS |
Commodities Supply of zinc and new ORS | Production, cost, and distribution of AIDS antiretroviral therapy, tools for HIV prevention and control, malaria combination treatment, and malaria-prevention tools may take priority over addressing supply of low-osmolarity ORS and treatment with zinc Competition with HIV and malaria drugs, tools, and vaccines for budget allotments Pharmaceutical companies may see greater potential for profit in production of antimalarial and antiretroviral treatments |
Personnel Availability of human resources in the health sector | Competition for scarce human resources from other disease-control programmes Competition for time of health workers: training courses, meetings, supervision Morbidity and mortality in health workers due to AIDS or malaria |
Quality of care Quality of case management by health workers | Clinical presentation of diarrhoea is more complex in children with HIV Confusion/overload in health workers relating to new guidelines for case management especially if they are not integrated with existing guidelines Emphasis by health workers often placed on management of fever/malaria than management of other illnesses |
Home-care Home management of diarrhoea by parents or other caretakers of young children | Sickness or death of parents from AIDS or malaria results in households headed by elderly caregivers or children, difficult for these caregivers to absorb new guidelines for the management of diarrhoea Diarrhoea might be perceived as symptom of malaria ( Results of formative research in southern Mali shows that health workers are likely to over-diagnose malaria giving antimalarials to a wider range of childhood illnesses, including diarrhoea Results of a pilot study in Mali showed that multiple treatments were beyond the financial means of families and difficult to administer correctly |
ORS=Oral rehydration salts