| Literature DB >> 23672371 |
João S Martins1, Anthony B Zwi, Karen Hobday, Fernando Bonaparte, Paul M Kelly.
Abstract
In 2007 Timor-Leste, a malaria endemic country, changed its Malaria Treatment Protocol for uncomplicated falciparum malaria from sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine to artemether-lumefantrine. The change in treatment policy was based on the rise in morbidity due to malaria and perception of increasing drug resistance. Despite a lack of nationally available evidence on drug resistance, the Ministry of Health decided to change the protocol. The policy process leading to this change was examined through a qualitative study on how the country developed its revised treatment protocol for malaria. This process involved many actors and was led by the Timor-Leste Ministry of Health and the WHO country office. This paper examines the challenges and opportunities identified during this period of treatment protocol change.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23672371 PMCID: PMC3665480 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4505-11-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Figure 1Process, timelines and actors.
Summary of actors’ roles and their contributions to the MTP development
| Ministry of Health | Develop malaria policies, coordinate and implement the malaria control program | Draft the protocol, lead process and finalisation of the protocol. |
| World Health Organization country office in Timor-Leste | Provide technical assistance needed by the MoH including policy development | Draft the protocol, search for evidence from the literature and seek advice from malaria experts in other countries. Assist the MoH in protocol formulation, completion and official approval. |
| Non-government organizations (HNI, CARE International, CRS, HAI) | Implement malaria control program particularly in health promotion and prevention activities | Some clinicians working with the NGOs provide technical expertise in relation to drug dosages and the application of the protocol in the IMCI program. |
| Bilateral – USAID through its agency TAIS | Implementing Child Survival Programs – mainly involved in ITN distribution | Contribute inputs to the finalisation of the draft protocol. |
| USAID offered to conduct SP efficacy study, but this was not taken forward. | ||
| Cuban Medical Brigade | Provide curative service but also health promotion and prevention activities. | Contribute to the finalisation of the draft protocol and Spanish translation. |
| Medical Association | Provide curative service, health promotion and prevention activities. | Contribute to the finalisation of the draft protocol, translation and socialisation. |
| Private Clinics | Curative service | One private clinic had used Artemisinin-based combination therapy prior to the official adoption by the MoH. |
| National Commission for Protocol Finalisation | The NCPF members drawn from the various organisations | Finalise the draft protocol, approve the MTP text, translate the MTP into Tetum and Spanish, and conduct socialisation. |
| The Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria | Provide funding for the Malaria Control Program | The Global Fund created the MWG. The MWG was instrumental to the proposed idea of changing MTP for |
| External expert | WHO SEARO had expertise in guideline development and RBM strategies | Provide advice on the protocol and development of the treatment guidelines including the formulation of drug dosages. |
| WHO-Regional Office and Mahidol University | Mahidol University provided pharmacological expertise |
AL: Artemether-Lumefantrine; CRS: Catholic Relief Services; HAI: Health Alliance International; HNI: HealthNet International; MTP: Malaria Treatment Protocol; MWG: Malaria Working Group; NCPF: National Commission for Protocol Finalisation; RBM: Roll Back Malaria; SP: Sulphadoxine-Pyrimethamine; TAIS: Timor-Leste Assistência Integrado Saúde; USAID: United States Agency for International Development; WHO SEARO: World Health Organization South East Asia Regional Office.
Reasons for changing the treatment protocol according to participants involved in MTP development
| n = 24 | Perceived SP resistance | 17 | 71% |
| No access to proper diagnosis and treatment | 8 | 33% | |
| Rising malaria incidence | 6 | 25% | |
| Health Minister’s request to change | 4 | 17% | |
| Fulfilling political commitment at regional level | 2 | 8% | |
| Losing faith in SP | 2 | 8% | |
| The desire to standardise malaria treatment | 1 | 4% | |
| ACT not yet resistant and price drop | 1 | 4% |
Note: more than one reason mentioned by informants.