| Literature DB >> 20028563 |
Michael Hawkes1, Jean Paul Katsuva, Claude K Masumbuko.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurate and practical malaria diagnostics, such as immunochromatographic rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs), have the potential to avert unnecessary treatments and save lives. Volunteer community health workers (CHWs) represent a potentially valuable human resource for expanding this technology to where it is most needed, remote rural communities in sub-Saharan Africa with limited health facilities and personnel. This study reports on a training programme for CHWs to incorporate RDTs into their management strategy for febrile children in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a tropical African setting ravaged by human conflict.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20028563 PMCID: PMC2804690 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-8-308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Signs and symptoms of febrile children (n = 357)
| Age category | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Fever | 78 (100) | 106 (100) | 173 (100) |
| headache | 3 (3) | 45 (42) | 123 (71) |
| fatigue/lethargy | 24 (30) | 44 (41) | 69 (39) |
| chills | 21 (26) | 29 (27) | 35 (20) |
| decreased oral intake/poor feeding | 18 (23) | 34 (32) | 33 (19) |
| myalgia | 0 | 10 (9) | 34 (19) |
| vomiting | 7 (8) | 20 (18) | 17 (9) |
| prolonged crying | 30 (38) | 8 (7) | 0 |
| seizures | 22 (28) | 5 (4) | 0 |
| dizziness | 0 | 5 (4) | 21 (12) |
| coryza | 2 (2) | 8 (7) | 17 (9) |
| cough | 3 (3) | 5 (4) | 9 (5) |
| pallor | 9 (11) | 4 (3) | 2 (1) |
| diarrhoea | 3 (3) | 10 (9) | 0 |
| respiratory distress | 5 (6) | 4 (3) | 1 (0.6) |
| visual disturbance | 0 | 0 | 3 (1) |
| splenomegaly | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.6) |
| lumbar pain | 0 | 1 (0.9) | 2 (1) |
| abdominal pain | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.6) |
| joint pain | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.6) |
Figure 1A simple decision analysis demonstrated elevated cost/utility ratio of rapid diagnostic testing (RDT) strategy at high malaria prevalence, in a hypothetical cohort of 100 febrile children. A. Decision analysis tree. Among simplifying assumptions (*), the cost of false negative malaria tests is neglected (given high test specificity and high disease prevalence). B. Equation relating the trade-off of increased cost but reduced number of unnecessary treatment courses associated with a strategy of RDT. C. Cost of two strategies (RDT, solid line versus presumptive treatment, dashed line) over a range of malaria prevalence. D. The cost of averting one unnecessary treatment with RDT rises steeply at high prevalence. NMFI, non-malaria febrile illness; TP, true positive; TN, true negative; FP, false positive; FN, false negative; cdx, cost of rapid diagnostic test; ctx, cost of treatment course; sens, sensitivity; spec, specificity; prev, prevalence.