| Literature DB >> 27898699 |
Gifty D Antwi1, Laura A Bates2, Rebecca King2, Princess R Mahama3, Harry Tagbor1, Matt Cairns4, James N Newell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC) is currently recommended for children under five in areas where malaria transmission is highly seasonal. We explored children's caregivers' and community health workers' (CHWs) responses to an extended 5-month SMC programme.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27898699 PMCID: PMC5127521 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166951
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Female caregivers and community health workers who took part in In-Depth Interviews or Focus Group Discussions.
| Method | Community characteristics | SMC Uptake | No. ID |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13 In Depth Interviews with Caregivers | Periurban villages with HCF | ≥ 4 doses (optimal) | 1A, 2A |
| Periurban village with HCF | ≤ 3 doses (sub-optimal) | 1B, 2B, 3B | |
| Periurban village without HCF | ≥ 4 doses (optimal) | 1C, 2C | |
| Periurban village without HCF | ≤ 3 doses (sub- optimal) | 1D, 2D, 3D | |
| Rural village without HCF | ≥ 4 doses (optimal) | 1E, 2E, 3E | |
| Rural village with HCF | ≤ 3 doses (sub- optimal) | - | |
| 6 Focus Group Discussions with Caregivers | Rural village without HCF | Varied uptake | F1, F2, F3 |
| Periurban village without HCF | Varied uptake | G1, G2 | |
| Periurban village with HCF | Varied uptake | H1 | |
| 2 Focus Group Discussions with CHWs | Community Health Workers (mixed villages) | - | CHW1, CHW2 |
Results of the coding and framework analysis.
| Categories of codes (mirroring pre-defined objectives) | Codes (used in Nvivo) | Themes (identified through analysis of framework matrix) | Sub-theme (detailed aspects of themes) | Key findings (Interpretation) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge of malaria | Malaria names | Malaria Literacy | The term ‘malaria’ is often used interchangeably with ‘fever’ | |
| Malaria health effects | Multiple causes of malaria | Confusion over promoted health messages | ||
| Malaria causes | Risk aware | Children are recognised as a vulnerable group | ||
| Malaria seasons | Prevention practices aware | Behaviours reflect CHWs’ health messages | ||
| Malaria vulnerability | Prevention medication unaware | Malaria-related health education may not improve uptake of SMC | ||
| Malaria general prevention in adults or in general | ||||
| Malaria general prevention in children | ||||
| Malaria prevention—IPT experience | ||||
| Malaria prevention—IPT knowledge | ||||
| Malaria treatment seeking behaviour | ||||
| Perceived effect of SMC on children's health | SMC good effects on children | Perceived Influence of SMC | Varied uptake and interpretation of side-effects | Uptake varied despite positive health effects |
| SMC bad effects on children | Supportive networks (f) | Supportive assurances may counteract negative influences | ||
| SMC effects on caregivers | Non-health benefits | Wider indirect benefits beyond child health | ||
| Trust (facilitated uptake) | Hierarchical trust (f) | Caregivers sought government and medical experts to sanction medication | ||
| Trust in the status quo (f) | CHWs are a conduit of that trust | |||
| A trust learnt though experience (f) | Learnt trust and positive testimony may encourage others | |||
| Experiences and attitudes concerning the concept of SMC | Blood testing | Understanding of Chemoprevention and Treatment Philosophy | Poor recall despite experience | Purpose of SMC could be made more clear and acceptable |
| Understanding SMC | Medical testing seen as a precursor to any medication (b) | Caregivers conditioned to RDT and medication to treat versus medication to protect | ||
| CHWs’ role in SMC trial | Medication for healthy children a difficult concept (b) | Challenge asking caregivers to re-prioritise their time | ||
| Experiences and attitudes concerning the regimen of the chemoprevention, in particular the extended period of SMC delivery | SMC reported dosage | Access to Medication and Dosing Regimen (was sometimes challenging) | Three-day regimen may be difficult to follow (b) | Close supervision of consumption and /or a single day regimen may aid uptake |
| SMC 3-day adherence ease and motivation | Five monthly cycles acceptable | Desire to collect SMC | ||
| SMC 3-day adherence challenges and reasoning | Access (b) & (f) | Limited communication of access and restricted modes of access to medication | ||
| SMC 5-month adherence ease and motivation | ||||
| SMC 5-month adherence challenges and reasons | ||||
| Preferred place of administration of SMC | Proposed SMC law in Ghana | Preferred distribution method | Caregivers and CHWs give little support for child welfare clinics | Multiple mechanisms of delivery will support users’ needs |
| Community meeting point—merits | Caregivers and CHWs give more support for community gatherings and home visits | Better communication and multiple distribution methods would support uptake | ||
| Community meeting point—challenges | CHWs propose community kiosks | Participants suggested meaningful ways to improve delivery and administration including Community Kiosks staffed by CHWs. | ||
| Community weighing centre—merits | CHWs to be trained | |||
| Community weighing centre—challenges | Finances required to resource CHWs to support delivery | |||
| At home–merits | ||||
| At home—challenges | ||||
| Other | Questions for the Interviewer at the end of interview |
NB: [(f) = cited facilitator of uptake and (b) = cited barrier of uptake)]
Summary of faciltators and barriers to SMC uptake amongst caregiver respondents, collected during a qualitative study in Ghana in January 2013.
| Facilitators of SMC uptake | Barriers to SMC uptake |
|---|---|
| • Trust in and respect for authorities who were seen to sanction and implement the SMC | • SMC programme was incompatible with some caregivers perceived needs, who believed there was no need to medicate children who were not sick and their time was better spent at work |
| • Proximity to and communication of fixed point delivery (community gatherings) | • Large distances to travel, restricted timings of, and poor communication of fixed point delivery (community gatherings) |
| • Flexible door-to-door (household) delivery | • Delivery of medication only to primary caregiver during door-to-door visits |
| • Beliefs that any perceived side-effects of SMC were attributable to the SMC medication treating undiagnosed malaria in the child | • Beliefs that any perceived side-effects of SMC were attributable to the SMC medication harming the child |
| • CHW supervision and administration of medication directly to the child at home. | • Need to consume all SMC medication over 3 consecutive days within a month. |
| • Reference to IPTp to explain the difference between malaria treatment medication and malaria prevention medication | • Caregivers found the concept of preventive medication difficult to understand despite experience of IPTp and the SMC programme |
| • Observation of other caregivers’ participation and their perceived positive health responses | • Belief the intervention was for research only and not routine care |
| • Reassurance from CHWs and senior family members on perceived side-effects (the basis for a supportive community-based network) |