| Literature DB >> 24924295 |
Esmée Ruizendaal1, Susan Dierickx, Koen Peeters Grietens, Henk D F H Schallig, Franco Pagnoni, Petra F Mens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria still causes high morbidity and mortality around the world, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa. Community case management of malaria (CCMm) by community health workers (CHWs) is one of the strategies to combat the disease by increasing access to malaria treatment. Currently, the World Health Organization recommends to treat only confirmed malaria cases, rather than to give presumptive treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24924295 PMCID: PMC4084582 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Flow chart of search strategy.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary for test performance. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 3Risk of bias summary for direct interpretation of RDT. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 4Risk of bias summary for interpretation of photographs. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 5Risk of bias summary for RDT execution. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 6Risk of bias summary for adherence. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 7Risk of bias summary for intervention studies on morbidity and mortality. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 8Risk of bias summary for cost-effectiveness studies. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 9Risk of bias summary for healthcare-seeking behaviour. + = low risk of bias, ? = unclear, - = high risk of bias.
Figure 10Forest plot of RDT performance when performed by CHWs (no subgroup analyses). Lemma 2011a = Paracheck Pf, Lemma 2011b = Parascreen pan/p.
RDT test performance by CHWs
| >2 months (history of) fever | CareStart | PCR | 56.7% | 61.8% | 95% | |
| >2 months (history of) fever | CareStart | Microscopy of thin and thick BS | 37.2% | 95.9% | 87% | |
| >5 years (history of) fever | Bioline SD, First Response malaria, Paracheck PF | Microscopy of thick BS (expert) | 38.5% | 95% | 43% | |
| >5 years (history of) fever | Bioline SD | Microscopy of thick BS (expert). | 41% | 97% | 39% | |
| >5 years (history of) fever | First response malaria | Microscopy of thick BS (expert). | 40% | 92% | 42% | |
| All ages, care seeking | Paracheck Pf, ParaHIT | Microscopy of thick and thin BS. | 20.8% | 88.6% | 88.2% | |
| < 5 years | Paracheck Pf, ParaHIT | Microscopy of thick and thin BS | 19.7% | 90.1% | 93.6% | |
| ≥5 years | Paracheck Pf, ParaHIT | Microscopy of thick and thin BS | 21% | 88.3% | 86.5% | |
| No fever patients | Paracheck Pf, ParaHIT | Microscopy of thick and thin BS | 14.5% | 84.7% | 90.1% | |
| Fever patients | Paracheck Pf, ParaHIT | Microscopy of thick and thin BS | 33.9% | 92.2% | 82.9% | |
| >3 months suspected of malaria | Paracheck Pf | Microscopy of thick BS. | 18.7% | 88.7% | 94.2% | |
| >3 months suspected of malaria | Parascreen | Microscopy of thick BS. | 18.7% | 83.2% | 95.1% | |
| >3 months (history of) fever. | Paracheck Pf | Microscopy of thick BS. | 22.6% | 85.3% | 59.8% | |
| Children <42 months | Parasight TM-F test | Microscopy of thin and thick BS. | 66.6% | 84% | 81% | |
| Children 6–59 months with (history of) fever. | FirstSign Malaria Pf | Microscopy of thin and thick BS. | 54.8% | 97.9% | 53.4% | |
| Children 6–59 months with (history of) fever. (High transmission) | FirstSign Malaria Pf | Microscopy of thin and thick BS. | 76.1% | 98% | 25.4% | |
| Children 6–59 months with (history of) fever. (Low transmission) | FirstSign Malaria Pf | Microscopy of thin and thick BS. | 31.8% | 97.6% | 63.7% |
*P. falciparum, **Two types of RDTs separately tested.
Interpretation and execution of RDTs by CHWs
| Half-day training. At 3 months CHWs received a poster-sized job aid and a photographic guide on RDT interpretation. | (I) RDT test results correctly read by 95.1, 98.3 and 98.3% of the CHWs at 3, 6 and 12 months after training respectively. | 19-item checklist, interpretation included, 8 items were considered critical. | |
| (II) Correct interpretation of positive RDT results was 96.5% at 3 months, 98.3% at 6 months and 90.5% at 12 months. | Median correctly performed critical steps were 87.5%, 100% and 100% at 3, 6 and 12 months respectively. | ||
| (II) Correct interpretation of negative RDT results was 94.3% at 3 months, 97.9% at 6 months and 94.7% at 12 months. | 40.3, 61.7 and 79.7% of CHWs correctly performed critical RDT steps at 3, 6 and 12 months respectively. | ||
| (II) Faint positive lines were correctly interpreted by 89.7% at 3 months, 96.7% at 6 months and declined to 76.7% at 12 months. | | ||
| 8-day training by experienced trainers. Job aid provided. | 100% of the RDTs were correctly interpreted shortly after training (<2 weeks). | 96.3% of RDTs were correctly performed shortly after training (<2 weeks) in a 14-item checklist, interpretation excluded. | |
| Group 1: only use of manufacturers’ instructions. Group 2: only use of job aid. Group 3: 3- hour training on RDTs + job aid. | (I) 72, 86 and 96% of CHWs correctly interpreted RDT results for group 1, 2 and 3 respectively. | 57% of steps, 80% of steps and 90% of steps were correctly performed by group 1, 2 and 3 respectively at the same day of receiving instructions, job aid or training in a 16-item checklist, interpretation included. | |
| (II) 54, 82 and 93% of tests were correctly interpreted for group 1, 2 and 3 respectively. | |||
| One day training. Pictorial job aid was provided. | 100% of CHWs correctly interpreted the RDT directly after training. | Median score on a WHO 16-item assessment of RDT performance was 100% (range of 94-100%) directly after training. | |
| CHWs: one month theoretical training, one month practical training at health post. CMDs: 3-day theoretical training, 15 days practical training at health post. | - | ||
| (1) Surface clean and flat - 87% | |||
| (2) Test opened just before use - 100% | |||
| (3) Document patient name and date - 83% | |||
| (4) Use of gloves - 0% | |||
| (5) 5 μL finger prick blood specimen - 93% | |||
| (6) 4 drops of solution buffer in right well - 93% | |||
| (7) test rest on level surface - 97% | |||
| (8) waited maximum 15 minutes - 93% | |||
| One week training. | 99.7% of positive tests were correctly interpreted throughout the 5-month study period. | - |
(I) Based on assessment of RDTs.
(II) Based on photographic assessment.
Adherence to test results by CHWs
| All ages, care seeking. | AL, SP <5 kg | Complicated malaria and non-malaria febrile cases were referred to HF. | 99.9% | 99.3% | 0.2% | |
| >5 years, (history of) fever | NS | Referral not mentioned. | 86.9% | 98% | 58% | |
| NS | AS/SP | Complicated malaria and non-malaria febrile cases were referred to HF. | 70%** | NS | NS | |
| ≥5 years with (history of) fever | AL | Referral not specified. | 95.8% | 98.9% | 5.4% | |
| >3 months, (history of) fever. Exclusion: severe disease | AL | Referral not specified. | 96.8% | 99.7% | 6.1% | |
| Patients of all ages, care seeking. | NS | CHW: referral of patients <2 months, RDT negatives, severe symptoms, suspected drug adverse events. CMD: referral of all cases excluding uncomplicated malaria cases. | 88.6% | 92.0% | 20.3% | |
| Patients of all ages, care seeking. | NS | CHW: Referral of patients <2 months, RDT negatives, severe symptoms, suspected drug adverse events. | 85.6% | 90.1% | 24.8% | |
| Patients of all ages, care seeking. | NS | CMD: Referral of all cases excluding uncomplicated malaria cases. | 93.9% | 95.3% | 10.4% | |
| Children 6 months-5 years, fever. | AL | Children with danger signs were referred to HF. | 99.3% | 98.5% | 0.4% | |
| Children <5 (history of) fever no danger signs. | AL | CHWs also diagnosed and treated pneumonia. No referral mentioned. | 97.8% | 98.6% | 4.8% | |
| BF: 6–59 months, (history of) fever | AL | Referral for severe disease and for non-responders at day 3 after CHW visit. | 99.0% | 100% | 4.8% | |
| Gh: 6–59 months, (history of) fever | AA | Referral for severe disease and for non-responders at day 3 after CHW visit. | 99.5% | 100% | 3.3% | |
| Ug: 4–59 months (history of) fever. | AL | Referral for severe disease and for non-responders at day 3 after CHW visit. | 99.0% | 99.9% | 7.6% | |
* = correct treatment, ** = percentage of CHWs that relied on RDT results, *** = adherence percentages calculated from study data, **** = CHWs attended review meetings with study team each month discussing non-adherence to diagnostic and treatment algorithm with CHWs, HF = health facility, NS = not specified, AL = artemether – lumefantrine, SP = sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine, AS = artesunate, ACT = artemisinin-based combination therapy (not further specified), BF = Burkina Faso, Gh = Ghana, Ug = Uganda.
Morbidity and mortality outcomes of RDT based CCMm strategies
| RCT | RDT-based CCMm | Presumptive CCMm | Increased perception of recovery in control group (97.3%) | |
| Two malaria related deaths, one in each arm. | ||||
| NRCT | RDT-based CCMm | No CCMm | Malaria related hospitalizations decreased by 43.1% in intervention areas and 40.9% in control areas. Malaria attributed deaths decreased by 62.5% in intervention areas (significant decrease) and 23.4% in control areas (no significant decrease). | |
| Pre-post study | RDT-based CCMm (with AL) | Comparison with pre-intervention period (presumptive CCMm with SP) | A drop of >72.0% in malaria slide positivity rate to a persistent low level of <10% was observed in the study period. | |
| Pre-post study | RDT-based CCMm (with AS/SP). | Comparison with pre-intervention period (no CCMm, health centres treated with AS/SP) | 24% fever cases in last two weeks pre-intervention and 8.5% fever cases post intervention (p = 0.000). | |
| 61 deaths (all <5 years) in the last season pre-implementation of intervention versus 1 death (>5 years) in the season post-implementation (p = 0.000). |
Healthcare-seeking behaviour
| RDT-based CCMm | Comparison with pre-intervention period (no CCMm) | Pre-intervention 25% of mothers of sick children <5 years would seek care within the village, after the study 64.7% would seek care within the village (p value). | |
| RDT-based CCMm | Presumptive CCMm | Only half the number of patients (5,123 patients) visited CHWs who performed RDT-based CCMm compared with presumptive CCMm (10,475 patients). | |
| RDT-based CCMm free of charge | Health centre care, little payment was required for ACT. | In two years there was an increase in number of episodes of treated malaria per child per year from 0.4 to 1.2 for CHWs, whereas it remained stable at 0.2 for health centres. |
Cost-effectiveness of RDT based CCMm strategies
| RDT-based CCMm for ≥5-14 years, presumptive <5 years old. | Presumptive treatment up to 14 years old. | 88% by microscopy, for calculations prevalence of 80% was considered. | 8.79 US$ for each case saved from unnecessary treatment (total health budget per person per year is 15$). Total costs three times as high for RDT based CCMm. | |
| RDT-based CCMm for | Two comparisons. 1. RDT-based CCMm for | Slide positivity rate 27.29%, of which 70% | Intervention: 4.66 US$ per correctly treated case. | |
| Control 1. 1.69 US$ per correctly treated case. | ||||
| Control 2. 11.08 US$ per correctly treated case. | ||||
| 2. Presumptive treatment with AL for all fever patients. | ||||
| Total costs were lowest for intervention strategy. | ||||
| RDT-based CCMm with AL for all age groups (free of charge) | Health centre-based care (free of charge) | Prevalence 24% in RDT-based CCMm and 26% in health centres, either by RDT or microscopy. | Cost per case appropriately diagnosed and treated 4.22 US$ in RDT based CCMm (mainly because of higher adherence) and 6.61 US$ in health centers. Additional cost per change in case appropriately diagnosed and treated was 4.18 US$. |