| Literature DB >> 27000034 |
Themba B Phiri1, Blessings N Kaunda-Khangamwa2, Andrew Bauleni2, Tiyese Chimuna3, David Melody3, Humphreys Kalengamaliro3, John H Sande4, Humphreys Kampira Nsona4, Don P Mathanga2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends that persons of all ages suspected of malaria should receive a parasitological confirmation of malaria by use of malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) at community level, and that rectal artesunate should be used as a pre-referral treatment for severe malaria to rapidly reduce parasitaemia. This paper reports on findings from a pilot study that assessed the feasibility, acceptability and effects of integrating RDTs and pre-referral rectal artesunate into the integrated Community Case Management programme in Malawi.Entities:
Keywords: Correct performance of RDTs; Feasibility; Hard to reach areas; Malaria rapid diagnostic tests; Pre-referral rectal artesunate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27000034 PMCID: PMC4802711 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1237-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Mchinji district CCM data (HMIS reports) showing use of RDTs and rectal artesunate in the 40 intervention hard-to-reach areas between January and September 2014
| Month 2014 | New fever cases seen at village clinics (with RDTs and RA) | Malaria confirmed cases (RDT positive) | Children with severe illness that were referred and that received RA |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 1758 | 1238 (70.4 %) | 29 |
| February | 2308 | 1621 (70.2 %) | 28 |
| March | 2422 | 1542 (63.6 %) | 22 |
| April | 2253 | 1678 (74.4 %) | 35 |
| May | 2680 | 1977 (73.7 %) | 36 |
| June | 2231 | 1653 (74.1 %) | 30 |
| July | 2217 | 1574 (71 %) | 27 |
| August | 1844 | 1272 (69.1 %) | 32 |
| September | 2019 | 1440 (71.3 %) | 29 |
| Total | 19,732 | 13,995 (70.9 %) | 268 |
Characteristics of study HSAs (Community Health Workers) that participated in the quality of care survey in the intervention hard-to-reach areas
| Variable | n (%) |
|---|---|
| CHWs (N = 40) | |
| Mean age of CHWs in years | 37.4 |
| Average years of experience working as CHWs in community | 10.4 |
| Sex (male) | 36 (90.0) |
| Year CHWs received initial iCCM training | |
| 2010–2012 | 34 (85.0) |
| 2013–2014 | 6 (15.0) |
| CHWs trained in performance of RDTs and RA administration | 40 (100.0) |
| Level of education | |
| Form 2 | 8 (20.0) |
| Form 4 | 19 (47.5) |
| Form 4 plus post basic training | 12 (30.0) |
| Professional training | 1 (2.5) |
Proportions of children for whom specific case management tasks were performed by CHWs; quality of care survey
| Variable | n/N (%) | 95 % CI |
|---|---|---|
| Classification | ||
| Children whose classification of uncomplicated fever given by CHWs matched the classification by IMCI trained clinician (Gold standard) | 78/83 (93.9) | [85.8–99.7] |
| Children whose classification of uncomplicated diarrheoa given by CHWs matched the classification by IMCI trained clinician (Gold standard) | 17/19 (89.4) | [79.3–97.0] |
| Children whose classification of uncomplicated cough/fast breathing given by CHWs matched the classification by IMCI trained clinician (Gold standard) | 10/14 (71.4) | [62.1–82.4] |
| Treatment of child illness by CHWs | ||
| Children with fever plus RDT +ve results who are prescribed an antimalarial (ACT) correctly | 49/55 (89.1) | [75.3–96.9] |
| Children with uncomplicated cough/fast breathing who are prescribed an antibiotic correctly | 9/14 (64.3) | [58.7–72.1] |
| Children with uncomplicated diarrheoa who are prescribed ORS correctly | 13/16 (81.2) | [72.6–93.2] |
| Children with uncomplicated diarrheoa who are prescribed zinc correctly | 5/6 (83.3) | [74.1–95.3] |
| Performance of RDTs by CHWs | ||
| CHWs with RDTs available at their village clinic | 39/40 (97.5) | [95.3–102.1] |
| Children with fever RDT performed | 86/90 (95.5) | [83.2–99.8] |
| RDTs performed correctly by CHWsa | 83/86 (96.5) | [86.8–101.8] |
| Children with RDT +ve results | 48/83 (57.8) | [43.5–67.1] |
| RDT results adhered to by CHWs when providing malaria treatment | 82/86 (95.3) | [74.8–93.7] |
| RDTs performances on which CHWs adhered to SOPs for disposal of bio-wastes and sharps | 82/86 (95.4) | [85.7–101.2] |
| Referral for danger signs and use of pre-referral rectal artesunate | ||
| Children with general danger signs referred | 7/9 (78.0) | [58.7–89.2] |
Three children presenting danger signs were observed being administered with rectal artesunate by HSAs during the assessment of care survey. Two out of these 3 (66.7 %) were observed to have been correctly administered with rectal artesunate suppository by HSAs
Correct administration of RA means CHWs being able to adhere to Standard Operation Procedures (SOPs) for administration of RA
a Correct performance of RDTs means that CHWs followed the Standard Operation Procedures (SOPs) for performing RDTs including disposal of bio-wastes on the day of survey
Utilization of village clinics for child’s illness, use of medicines at village clinics managed by CHWs in Mchinji district 2014: data collected at baseline survey (October 2013) and end line survey (October 2014)
| Variable | Intervention | Control | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | End line | Baseline | End line | |
| n (%) [95 % CI] | n (%) [95 % CI] | n (%) [95 % CI] | n (%) [95 % CI] | |
| Source where care for child’s illness was sought first | (N = 124) | (N = 107) | (N = 88) | (N = 84) |
| CHWs (village clinics) | 42 (33.9) [25.5 to 42.3] | 96 (89.7) [83.9 to 95.5] | 36 (40.9) [30.5 to 51.3] | 40 (47.6) [36.8 to 58.3] |
| Government Health Facility | 63 (50.8) [41.9 to 59.7] | 8 (7.5) [2.5 to 12.5] | 32 (36.4) [26.2 to 46.5] | 27 (32.1) [22.0 to 42.2] |
| Mission (CHAM) Health Facility | 3 (2.4) [0.03 to 5.0] | 1 (0.9) [0.7 to 2.7] | 1 (1.1) [−1 to 3.4] | 4 (4.8) [0.1 to 9.3] |
| Other non-formal sources (shops, traditional healers) | 16 (12.9) [6.9 to 18.9] | 2 (1.9) [0.9 to 4.4] | 19 (21.6) [12.9 to 30.3] | 13 (15.5) [7.6 to 23.3] |
| Use of LA at village clinics | (N = 30) | (N = 36) | (N = 19) | (N = 15) |
| Children with fever/confirmed malaria that received LA | 18 (60.0) [41.4 to 78.6] | 35 (97.2) [91.8 to 104.3] | 14 (73.6) [47.9 to 92.7] | 14 (93.3) [76.3 to 98.4] |
| Use of ORS and zinc at village clinics | (N = 20) | (N = 19) | (N = 12) | (N = 15) |
| Children with diarrhoea that received ORS | 17 (77.3) [58.3 to 96.3] | 12 (63.2) [41.8 to 89.9] | 7 (58.5) [44.3 to 69.4] | 10 (66.6) [37.4 to 87.5] |
| Children with diarrhoea that received Zinc | 2 (8.3) [3.5 to 20.3] | 10 (52.6) [46.2 to 78.1] | 4(20.0) [0.8 to 39.2] | 9 (60.0) [46.5 to 76.2] |
| Use of antibiotics at village clinics | (N = 24) | (N = 41) | (N = 6) | (N = 10) |
| Children with cough that received Antibiotics | 21 (84.0) [68.6 to 99.4] | 34 (83.0) [74.8 to 96.4] | 5 (83.3) [40.5 to 126.0] | 9 (90.0) [87.8 to 100.8] |
| Caregivers adherence with CHWs treatment regimen | (N = 55) | (N = 35) | (N = 31) | (N = 14) |
| Sought care for child’s fever within 24 h of onset of fever | 38 (44.2) [33.5 to 54.8] | 33 (94.2) [86.0 to 99.7] | 20 (64.5) [45.5 to 72.9] | 11 (78.5) [64.5 to 85.4 |
| Caregiver gave correct dose of LA to fever child | 10 (37.0) [18.1 to 55.9] | 24 (68.5) [59.1 to 80.6] | 8 (25.8) [17.3 to 36.5] | 7 (50.0) [37.2 to 63.2] |
| Caregiver gave first dose of LA the same day to child | 7 (10.4) [2.9 to 17.9] | 35 (100.0) [96.6 to 108.7] | 3 (9.6) [3.2 to 17.5] | 12 (85.7) [62.6 to 95.1] |
| Children referred by CHWs (VCs) | (N = 42) | (N = 35) | (N = 36) | (N = 40) |
| Children referred to Health Facilities from village clinics due to danger signs including severe malaria | 11 (26.19) [12.3 to 40.1] | 5 ( 5.2) [0.8 to 12.3] | 4 (11.1) [0.3 to 21.9] | 12 (30.0) [15.2 to 46.8] |