| Literature DB >> 26987387 |
Eric Bertrand Fokam1, Leonard Ngimuh2, Judith K Anchang-Kimbi1, Samuel Wanji3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria in pregnancy is an immense public health problem with at least 50 million pregnant women living in malaria endemic areas. To prevent malaria and its complications in pregnancy the World Health Organization recommends the use of intermittent preventive treatment sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP), the use of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs), and effective case management. In most malaria endemic countries in Africa, 40% of pregnant women sleep under ITNs. In Cameroon, about 90% of pregnant women receive the first dose of SP, while 64% take the complete dose. Following the 2011 mass-campaign of free distribution of ITNs coupled with routine ANC distribution of ITN and adoption of IPTp in Cameroon, little has been done to assess the effectiveness of both interventions outside of Yaoundé, the capital city. This study sought to assess the usage and effectiveness of IPTp-SP and ITNs on malaria in pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: IPT-SP; ITNs; Malaria; Pregnancy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26987387 PMCID: PMC4794838 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1228-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Demographic characteristics of study population
| Factors | N = 410 (%) | ITN usage (133) (%) | IPTp usage (259) (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||
| ≤20 | 38 (9.3) | 6 (4.5) | 19 (7.3) |
| 21–25 | 142 (34.6) | 30 (22.6) | 92 (35.5) |
| >25 | 230 (56.1) | 97 (72.9) | 148 (57.2) |
| Educational level | |||
| Primary level | 91 (22.2) | 36 (27.1) | 56 (21.6) |
| Secondary/high school | 182 (44.4) | 65 (48.9) | 108 (41.7) |
| Tertiary | 137 (33.4) | 32 (24.1) | 95 (36.7) |
| Gravidity | |||
| Primigravid | 152 (37.1) | 28 (21.1) | 94 (36.3) |
| Secundigravid | 122 (29.8) | 45 (33.8) | 76 (29.3) |
| Multiplegravid | 136 (33.2) | 60 (45.1) | 89 (34.4) |
| Occupation | |||
| Students/unemployed | 135 (33) | 21 (15.8) | 88 (34) |
| Business | 123 (30) | 43 (32.3) | 79 (30.5) |
| Civil servant | 76 (18.5) | 35 (26.3) | 50 (19.3) |
| House wife/farmer | 76 (18.5) | 34 (25.6) | 42 (16.2) |
| Number of ANC visits | |||
| First visit | 88 (21.5) | 25 (18.8) | 5 (1.93) |
| Second visits | 131 (32) | 39 (29.3) | 81 (31.3) |
| Three or more visits | 191 (46.6) | 69 (51.9) | 173 (66.8) |
| Trimester | |||
| First | 19 (4.6) | 5 (3.8) | 0 (0) |
| Second | 238 (58) | 73 (54.9) | 120 (46.3) |
| Third | 153 (37.3) | 55 (41.4) | 139 (53.7) |
Fig. 1Influence of the different interventions on mean parasitaemia
Effects of the usage of the different interventions on malaria, parasitaemia and haemoglobin levels
| Factor | Form of intervention | Total N = 410 | Significance level | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IPT + ITN N = 97 | IPT only N = 164 | ITN only N = 36 | None N = 113 | |||
| Malaria prevalence | 7 (7.2 %) | 21 (12.8 %) | 6 (16.7 %) | 21 (18.6 %) | 55 (13.4 %) | χ2 = 6.188 P = 0.103 |
| GMPD | 123 ± 694 | 137 ± 653 | 915 ± 2549 | 461 ± 11,114 | 261 ± 7056 | χ2 = 6.975 P = 0.073 |
| Anaemia prevalence | 46 (47.4 %) | 54 (32.9 %) | 17 (47.2 %) | 54 (47.8 %) | 171 (41.7 %) | χ2 = 8.673 P = 0.034 |
| GMHB | 10.34 ± 1.66 | 10.67 ± 1.40 | 10.10 ± 1.26 | 10.22 ± 1.47 | 10.42 ± 1.48 | χ2 = |
GMPD is geometric mean of parasite density and GMHB is geometric mean of Haemoglobin levels
Fig. 2Effects of the different interventions on anaemia status
Fig. 3Effects of IPT-SP and ITN on malaria prevalence