| Literature DB >> 26728037 |
Olugbenga A Mokuolu1, Godwin N Ntadom2, Olufemi O Ajumobi3, Roberts A Alero4, Robinson D Wammanda5, Olanrewaju T Adedoyin6, Henrietta U Okafor7, Adekunle D Alabi8, Friday A Odey9, Chimere O Agomo10, Kate U Edozieh11, Tolulope O Fagbemi12, Ahmad M Njidda13, Seye Babatunde14, Emmanuel C Agbo15, Nnamdi B Nwaneri16, Emmanuel D Shekarau17, Temitope O Obasa18, Nnenna M Ezeigwe19.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nigeria has the largest number of malaria-related deaths, accounting for a third of global malaria deaths. It is important that the country attains universal coverage of key malaria interventions, one of which is the policy of universal testing before treatment, which the country has recently adopted. However, there is a dearth of data on its implementation in formal private health facilities, where close to a third of the population seek health care. This study identified the level of use of malaria rapid diagnostic testing (RDT), compliance with test results and associated challenges in the formal private health facilities in Nigeria.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26728037 PMCID: PMC4700573 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-1064-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Flow chart on sampling procedure
Fig. 2Description of algorithm for data collection and enrolment of subjects
Record of attendance in sampled formal private health facilities in Nigeria
| State (no of HF)a | Total attendance | Total fever | Percentage with fever |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cross River state (n = 37) | 17,745 | 8374 | 47 |
| Enugu (n = 40) | 73,670 | 29,924 | 41 |
| Kaduna (n = 33) | 65,879 | 29,317 | 45 |
| Kwara (n = 13) | 39,292 | 11,078 | 28 |
| Lagos (n = 39) | 47,506 | 16,904 | 36 |
| Ogun (n = 38) | 48,338 | 16,924 | 35 |
| Total (n = 200) |
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aData was incomplete in some states
Frequency of complaints among 2077 respondents with fever by study sites
| State | Fever | Concomitant symptoms | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General weakness | Cough catarrh | Diarrhoea vomiting | Convulsions | Pallor | ||
| C/River | 344 | 258 | 210 | 120 | 10 | 3 |
| Enugu | 385 | 181 | 223 | 154 | 7 | 19 |
| Kaduna | 398 | 211 | 140 | 170 | 0 | 19 |
| Kwara | 375 | 245 | 152 | 170 | 6 | 18 |
| Lagos | 327 | 268 | 149 | 134 | 1 | 49 |
| Ogun | 248 | 101 | 109 | 132 | 4 | 71 |
| Total |
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Multiple symptoms
Compliance with use of ACTs
| States | Test Result Known | Positive + ACT | Negative–ACT | Compliance (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C/River | 262 | 191 | 19 | 80.2 |
| Enugu | 203 | 134 | 18 | 74.9 |
| Kaduna | 293 | 214 | 34 | 84.6 |
| Kwara | 177 | 143 | 11 | 87.0 |
| Lagos | 187 | 118 | 27 | 77.5 |
| Ogun | 138 | 92 | 17 | 79.0 |
| Total |
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Malaria Test result and ACT use
| Selection | n | ACT given | Chi square P-value | Compliance (95 % CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes (%) | No (%) | ||||
| All tests | 1259 | <0.0001 | 80.9 (78.7–83.0) | ||
| Positive | 892 (82.7) | 186 (17.3) | |||
| Negative | 55 (30.4) | 126 (69.6) | |||
| Microscopy only | 633 | <0.0001 | 83.1 (80.0–85.8) | ||
| Positive | 484 (85.7) | 81 (14.3) | |||
| Negative | 26 (38.2 %) | 42 (61.8 %) | |||
| mRDT only | 412 | <0.0001 | 85.7 (82.0–88.7) | ||
| Positive | 291 (88.7) | 37 (11.3) | |||
| Negative | 22 (26.2) | 62 (73.8) | |||
| Under 5 | 117 | <0.0001 | 79.5 (71.3–85.8) | ||
| Positive | 84 (79.2) | 22 (20.8) | |||
| Negative | 2 (18.2) | 9 (81.8) | |||
| 5-years & above | 1081 | <0.0001 | 80.9 (78.4–83.1) | ||
| Positive | 760 (82.8) | 158 (17.2) | |||
| Negative | 49 (30.1) | 114 (89.9) | |||
Perceptions and practices from the key health workers’ interviews on malaria rapid diagnostic use in the health facilities
| Item assessed | n | Responses | Percent (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Health facilities with knowledgeable health workers |
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| Meaning of RDT | 231 | 168 | 72.7 (67–78) |
| What RDT assesses | 232 | 196 | 81.7 (79–89) |
| Specimen required | 229 | 210 | 91.7 (87–95) |
| Report ability to do test | 223 | 160 | 71.7 (66–77) |
| Health facility mRDT practices by health workers |
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| Dedicated health worker for mRDT | 184 | 125 | 67.9 (61–74) |
| Use mRDT to determine treatment | 186 | 137 | 73.7 (67–79) |
| Use mRDT routinely | 185 | 107 | 107 (52–66) |
| Result available when treating patient | 156 | 137 | 87.8 (82–92) |
| Perception in the health facilities on the use of mRDT Variable |
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| Useful for malaria diagnosis | 166 | 132 | 79.5 (73–85) |
| Takes short time | 172 | 155 | 90.1 (85–94) |
| Easy to conduct | 131 | 126 | 96.2 (91–98) |
| Does not interfere with clinic activities | 129 | 122 | 94.6 (89–97) |