| Literature DB >> 26896962 |
Lawrence G Febir1, Kwaku Poku Asante2, Samuel Afari-Asiedu3, Livesy N Abokyi4, Anthony Kwarteng5, Bernhards Ogutu6, Margaret Gyapong7, Seth Owusu-Agyei8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria accounts for many deaths and illnesses, mostly among young children and pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa. An integrated approach is recommended to ensure effective malaria control. Socio-cultural factors continue to serve as determinants of malaria health-seeking behaviour. An INDEPTH effectiveness and safety study platform was established to unearth issues around the use of licensed and nationally recommended anti-malarials in real life settings. This study reports on treatment-seeking behaviour for uncomplicated malaria among community members.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26896962 PMCID: PMC4761197 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1151-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
How data collected in December 2009–October 2010 was analyzed
| 1 | Two moderators coded data independently |
| 2 | 10 % of data were independently coded and compared to ensure inter coder reliability and an agreement then reached on a coding tree |
| 3 | Themes were identified in advance and emerging themes were derived from data |
| 4 | Nvivo version 8 software was used for data management |
| 5 | Quotations were presented to illustrate themes. All quotes attributable to participants were anonimized |
| 6 | Major themes were clearly presented in the findings |
| 7 | There were descriptions of diverse cases and discussion of major themes |
Characteristics of respondents
| Data collection method | Age ranges of participants | Education level of participants | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Women | Men | Women | |
| Focus Group discussion | 25–80 | 18–45 | From no education to tertiary | From no education to senior high school |
| INDEPTH Interview | 35–52 | 53–56 | From middle School leaving certificate to senior high school | From middle school leaving certificate to Midwifery |
| Illness narrative interview | 36–60 | 18–55 | From no education- to general certificate of Education (ordinary level) | From no education to senior high school |
List of medicines sold to patients in the study area who present with fever/malaria at chemical stores: December 2009–October 2010
| Type of anti-malarial monotherapy | Other medicines |
|---|---|
| Malafan (Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine) | Paracetamol |
| Kinaquin 442 (Chloroquine) | Oral Rehydration Salt |
| Chloroquine | Glucose |
| Camoquine (Amodiaquine) | Cafenol (Acetaminophen, Caffeine) |
| Amodiaquine syrup | Vitamin B complex |
| Amodiaquine suspension | Quick Action (Caffein Ephedrine HCL, paracetamol) |
Table showing herbal plants used to treat uncomplicated malaria in the study area: December 2009–October 2010
| Local name of plant mentioned by respondents | English name of plant | Scientific name |
|---|---|---|
| “Duagyene-wuraa” | “Neam tree Leaves” |
|
| “Kashedua wuraa” | “Acacia tree Leaves” |
|
| “Acheamponwuraa” | “Siam weed” |
|
| “Amango-wuraa” | “Mango leaves” |
|
| “Brofrewuraa-a-awo” | “Dried pawpaw leaves” |
|
| “Teek-wuraa” | “Teak leaves” |
|
| Ankaa-twadee-wuraa | “Lime/Lemon leaves” |
|
Category of staff, hours of operation and the type of services provided in health centres and chemical stores in December 2009–October 2010
| Category of staff | Hours of operation | Type of services provided |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Staff in-Charge of Health Centre (Enrolled nurse or a Physician Assistant)a | 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days (official hours). A patient could call in at any time during the night or over the weekend | (1) In-charge of the day-to-day work at the health centre |
| Staff in-charge of history and records (community Health) | 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days (official hours). A patient could call in at any time during the night or over the weekend and could be called to assist consulting nurse | In charge of taking medical history and keeping of records of facility |
| Staff in-charge of consulting (enrolled nurse or a Physician Assistant) | 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days (official hours). A patient could call in at any time during the night or over the weekend | Serve as consulting nurse in most medical cases that are reported at the health centre including diagnosing and treatment of uncomplicated malaria |
| Staff in-charge of dispensary (Community Health Nurse) | 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days (official hours). A patient could call in at any time during the night or over the weekend and could be called to assist consulting nurse | In charge of dispensing of drugs to patients who call at the health centre |
|
| ||
| Chemical store ownera | 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days. A patient could call in at the drug store at any time during the night or over the weekend | (1) Diagnostics |
| Chemical store assistant | Work from 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during week days. A patient could call in at the drug store at any time during the night or over the weekend. The assistant acts in the absence of the drug shop owner | (1) Diagnostics |
aMain respondent in the IDIs