| Literature DB >> 25495698 |
Busiku Hamainza1, Gerry F Killeen, Mulakwa Kamuliwo, Adam Bennett, Joshua O Yukich.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Timeliness, completeness, and accuracy are key requirements for any surveillance system to reliably monitor disease burden and guide efficient resource prioritization. Evidence that electronic reporting of malaria cases by community health workers (CHWs) meet these requirements remains limited.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25495698 PMCID: PMC4295270 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Map showing the selected health facilities around which the community health workers, and the catchment populations they served, were located.
Figure 2Screenshot examples of Community Health Worker (CHW) mobile phone short messaging service (SMS) text before transmission to the National Malaria Control Centre and an Illustration of the interpretation of the code sent through the SMS reporting system. A: example of an SMS code for study participants that were attended to through the passive system when they self-reported to the CHW, B: example of an SMS code for study participants contacted through active monthly household visits, C: Example of an SMS code for reporting on use and availability of AL and RDTs, D: Schematic Illustration of the format and syntax of reports for diagnostic results from both passive and active visits, and E: Schematic Illustration of the format and syntax of reports for the availability of AL and RDTs. REG refers to passive participants data, SCR refers to active participant data, ACT refers to Artemether Lumefantrine stocks, RDT refers to rapid diagnostic test stocks, OPD refers to passive participant contact, and Y or N – refer to stock availability (Yes or No). Note that CHWs did not report fields H, J, K in the REG report or G, H, J in the SCR report because these represent microscopy data elements that were only collected by the health facilities.
Data element definitions for all data transmitted through the SMS mobile reporting system
| Data element | Definition |
|---|---|
| REG (A)TOTAL OPD | Total number of study participants that sort care from the CHWS |
| REG (B) TOTAL SUSPECTED | Total number of study participants that sort care from the CHWs and were suspected of having malaria |
| REG (C) UNDER 5 RDT +VE | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs under the age of five and had a positive rapid diagnostic test result |
| REG (D) UNDER 5 RDT -VE | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs under the age of five and had a negative rapid diagnostic test result |
| REG (E) OVER 5 RDT +VE | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs over the age of five and had a positive rapid diagnostic test result |
| REG (F) OVER 5 RDT -VE | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs over the age of five and had a negative rapid diagnostic test result |
| REG (L) FEVER UNDER 5 | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs under the age of five who were febrile |
| REG (M) FEVER OVER 5 | Total number of study participants that sort care from CHWs over the age of five who were febrile |
| SCR (A) TOTAL SCREENED | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs |
| SCR (B) UNDER 5 +VE | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs under the age of five and had a positive rapid diagnostic test result |
| SCR (C) UNDER 5 RDT -VE | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs under the age of five and had a negative rapid diagnostic test result |
| SCR (D) OVER 5 RDT +VE | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs over the age of five and had a positive rapid diagnostic test result |
| SCR (E) OVER 5 RDT -VE | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs over the age of five and had a negative rapid diagnostic test result |
| SCR (K) FEVER UNDER 5 | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs under the age of five who were febrile |
| SCR (L) FEVER OVER 5 | Total number of study participants that consented to actively being tested for malaria by CHWs over the age of five who were febrile |
| (A) 6S PRESCRIBED | Total number of AL 6 packs prescribed and provided to study participants |
| (B) INSTOCK | Total available AL 6 packs |
| (C) 12S PRESCRIBED | Total number of AL 12 packs prescribed and provided to study participants |
| (D) INSTOCK | Total available AL 12 packs |
| (E) 18S PRESCRIBED | Total number of AL 18 packs prescribed and provided to study participants |
| (F) INSTOCK | Total available AL 18 packs |
| (G) 24S PRESCRIBED | Total number of AL 24 packs prescribed and provided to study participants |
| (H) INSTOCK | Total available AL 24 packs |
| (J) RDT AVAILABLE | Total available individual rapid diagnostic tests |
| (K) RDT USED | Total used individual rapid diagnostic tests |
Figure 3Bland-Altman plots of the difference between weekly numbers of rapid diagnostic test detected malaria infections recorded in the reference paper register and reported by SMS against their mean, overall (A), or disaggregated into active (B) and passive (C) participant contacts.
Figure 4Time trend series plot of weekly means, aggregated across all community health workers, for number of rapid diagnostic test detected malaria infections (A) and associated diagnostic positivity (B) as recorded by the reference paper-based registers and reported by SMS.
Figure 5Difference plots for number of rapid diagnostic test detected malaria infections (A, C, E) and diagnostic positivity (B, D, F) as recorded by the reference paper register and reported by SMS overall (A and B), or disaggregated by active (C and D) and passive (E and F) participant contacts.
Figure 6Locally weighted scatter-plot smoother (LOESS) plots of weekly cluster-disaggregated mean number of rapid diagnostic test detected malaria infections recorded by the reference paper-based registers and reported in the SMS system against time in weeks of reporting.
Figure 7Locally weighted scatter-plot smoother (LOESS) plots of weekly cluster-disaggregated diagnostic positivity recorded by the reference paper-based registers and reported in the SMS system against time in weeks of reporting.