| Literature DB >> 25986063 |
R Matthew Chico1, Stephanie Dellicour2, Elaine Roman3, Viviana Mangiaterra4, Jane Coleman5, Clara Menendez6, Maud Majeres-Lugand7, Jayne Webster8, Jenny Hill9.
Abstract
Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy is a highly cost-effective intervention which significantly improves maternal and birth outcomes among mothers and their newborns who live in areas of moderate to high malaria transmission. However, coverage in sub-Saharan Africa remains unacceptably low, calling for urgent action to increase uptake dramatically and maximize its public health impact. The 'Global Call to Action' outlines priority actions that will pave the way to success in achieving national and international coverage targets. Immediate action is needed from national health institutions in malaria-endemic countries, the donor community, the research community, members of the pharmaceutical industry and private sector, along with technical partners at the global and local levels, to protect pregnant women and their babies from the preventable, adverse effects of malaria in pregnancy.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25986063 PMCID: PMC4458013 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0728-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Recommended actions for the scale-up of IPTp
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Establish or strengthen national technical working groups on, or including, MiP to improve the quality of service delivery of focused ANC in both the public and private sectora |
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Disseminate clear guidelines with simplified language for IPTp based on the WHO 2012 policy update and ensure that IPTp is in national strategic and operational plans | |
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Reduce, or eliminate where possible, ANC fees to overcome cost as a barrier to ANC access for end-users and the uptake of IPTp |
| ➢ Donor community | ➢ Increase levels of financial support for health systems strengthening with focus on the ANC platform | ||
| ➢ Provide support for operational research to improve the quality of service delivery and increase IPTp coverage | |||
| ➢ Promote the inclusion of IPTp and malaria control in pregnancy within grant proposals (e.g. The Global Fund and President’s Malaria Initiative) from endemic countries, alongside all programme areas of health systems strengthening | |||
| ➢ Support private sector engagement in increasing funding and support for improved IPTp coverage | |||
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Ensure healthcare providers in the public and private sectors have access to and training on the updated IPTp guidelines |
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Earmark funding for procurement for IPTp delivery through ANC channels in both the public and private sector to prevent stock-outs |
| ➢ Pharmaceutical industry | ➢ Meet the demand for SP procurement and register quality SP in all malaria-endemic countries | ||
| ➢ Meet the demand for procurement and register low-dose folic acid in all malaria-endemic countries | |||
| ➢ Identify and develop new drugs suitable for use as IPTp | |||
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Ensure IPTp coverage indicators are in line with new policy |
| ➢ Use District Health Management Information System (HMIS) to measure coverage of IPTp, report changes in coverage, identify bottlenecks and take necessary action | |||
| ➢ Research community; National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries and WHO | ➢ Collaborate with WHO and Ministries of Health to establish monitoring and evaluation plans for: | ||
| ◦ SP resistance and its impact on IPTp-SP effectiveness; | |||
| ◦ Reducing malaria transmission and its impact on IPTp-SP effectiveness; | |||
| ◦ Data on uptake and coverage of IPTp from district and facility levels that will help to identify implementation bottlenecks. | |||
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Explore innovative opportunities in the community for service delivery, both to extend antenatal clinic-based programmes and to serve women where ANC services are under-developed |
| ➢ Research community | ➢ Evaluate alternative strategies for the delivery of IPTp in hard-to-reach populations or communities | ||
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| ➢ National health institutions in malaria-endemic countries | ➢ Undertake targeted communication campaigns at both the community and facility levels to promote ANC attendance among pregnant women and to raise awareness of the benefits of IPTp | |
| ➢ Research community | ➢ Identify, promote and evaluate successful behaviour change communication strategies based on the RBM toolkitb to: | ||
| ◦ Increase demand and acceptance of IPTp-SP by pregnant women; | |||
| ◦ Improve healthcare provider attitudes and performance; |
Abbreviations: ANC antenatal care, IPTp intermittent preventive treatment for malaria in pregnancy, RBM Roll Back Malaria Partnership, SP sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine, WHO World Health Organization
aNon-governmental sector in this context includes private practitioners, faith-based organizations and other non-governmental organizations that provide health services outside of the Ministry of Health
b http://www.rollbackmalaria.org/files/files/partnership/wg/wg_communication/docs/Malaria-BCC-Indicators-Reference-Guide.pdf