| Literature DB >> 28114942 |
Ruth J Namuyinga1, Dyson Mwandama2, Dubulao Moyo3, Austin Gumbo3, Peter Troell4, Miwako Kobayashi5, Monica Shah6, Andrew Bauleni2, Jodi Vanden Eng7, Alexander K Rowe6, Don P Mathanga2, Laura C Steinhardt6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Appropriate diagnosis and treatment are essential for reducing malaria mortality. A cross-sectional outpatient health facility (HF) survey was conducted in southern Malawi from January to March 2015 to determine appropriate malaria testing and treatment practices four years after implementation of a policy requiring diagnostic confirmation before treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Case management; Guidelines; Health worker; Malaria; Malawi; Outpatient; Testing; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28114942 PMCID: PMC5260110 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1693-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Malaria definitions
| 1. Suspect uncomplicated malaria categories by age and pregnancy status |
| Children <5 years of age or pregnant women in the first trimester: |
| History of fevera or measured axillary temperature ≥37.5 °C |
| Patients ≥5 years of age |
| History of fevera or measured axillary temperature ≥37.5 °C AND at least one additional sign or symptom suggestive of malaria (i.e., chills, muscle or joint pain, headache, vomiting, diarrhoea, weakness, nausea, dizziness, fatigue or abdominal pain) |
| 2. Suspect severe malaria |
| Patients with any of the following: history of convulsions, lethargy, no urine output, jaundice, coca-cola-coloured urine, palmar pallor, or vomiting everything |
| For patients <5 years of age, neck stiffness or unable to drink or breastfeed were also included |
aHistory of fever was defined as: (1) Patient mentioned that their current illness involved a fever when asked by surveyor during the exit interview. (2) Patient spontaneously reported fever to the HW. (3) Patient reported fever to the HW or surveyor when asked
Fig. 1Map of southern Malawi showing 99 of 105 participating health facilities with GPS coordinates
Summary characteristics of surveyed outpatient health facilities—Southern Malawi, 2015 (N = 105)
| n | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Operation of health facility | ||
| Ministry of Health | 84 | 80.0 |
| CHAM | 21 | 20.0 |
| Health facility type | ||
| Health centre | 90 | 85.7 |
| Community hospital | 9 | 8.6 |
| District hospital | 6 | 5.7 |
| Diagnostic capacity | ||
| Microscopy service functional for full day of survey | 26 | 24.8 |
| RDTs in stock for full day of survey | 83 | 79.1 |
| Either microscopy or RDT functional for day of surveya | 94 | 89.5 |
| Haemoglobin testing functional for full day | 11 | 10.5 |
| Infrastructure and equipment available on day of survey | ||
| Clean drinking water | 93 | 88.6 |
| Cups for administering oral medications available | 69 | 65.7 |
| Functioning hanging or standing scale | 98 | 90.5 |
| Functioning thermometer | 69 | 65.7 |
| Availability of 2013 malaria treatment guidelines on day of survey | ||
| Copy of 2013 national or other reference material on malaria treatment guidelines | 50 | 47.6 |
| Wall flowchart with 2013 malaria treatment guidelines | 14 | 13.3 |
aAn additional 4 facilities had testing availability for part of the day
Summary characteristics of health workers providing outpatient care at surveyed health facilities—Southern Malawi, 2015 (N = 150a)
| n | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Cadre of health worker caring for patients in sampled outpatient department | ||
| Medical assistant (2 years of formal training plus 1 year internship) | 100 | 66.7 |
| Clinical officer (3 years of formal training plus 1 year internship) | 23 | 15.3 |
| Nurseb (at least 3 years of formal training) | 21 | 14.0 |
| Patient attendant (no formal training) | 4 | 2.7 |
| Pharmacy technician (2 years of formal training) | 1 | 0.7 |
| Health surveillance assistant (6 weeks of formal training) | 1 | 0.7 |
| Training and guidelines | ||
| Malaria case management (in-service)c training ≥2013 | 113 | 75.3 |
| Malaria case management (on-the-job)d training ≥2013 | 53 | 35.3 |
| Either in-service or on-the-job malaria case management training ≥2013 | 128 | 85.3 |
| Integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI) training within the last 5 years | 27 | 18.0 |
| Has a copy of the latest malaria treatment guidelines (dated ≥2013) | 70 | 46.7 |
| Supervision | ||
| Received any supervision in the past 6 months | 101 | 67.3 |
| Received at least two supervisory visits in the past 6 months | 67 | 44.7 |
| Supervision visits that included observation of patient consultations | 55 | 36.7 |
| At least one supervisory visit with observation of patient consultations that involved assessing health workers’ knowledge and prescription practices of anti-malarial drugse | 36 | 24.0 |
| Other characteristics | Median (IQR) | Min–Max |
| Age | 29.0 (26.0, 36.0) | 21–75 |
| Years of experience | 4.0 (2.0, 7.0) | 0–45 |
aSix of the 150 HWs did not see any enrolled patients but were interviewed by the survey teams
bNurse category includes 20 nurse midwife technicians (3 years of formal training) and a Registered nurse (with a 4-year degree)
cIn-service malaria case-management training refers to a formal, typically off-site multiday training on malaria diagnosis and treatment
dOn-the-job training is an informal training provided to health workers at their place of employment by the facility in-charge, a co-worker, NGO staff, District Health Management Team or other Ministry of Health staff
eAssessment of health workers’ knowledge on malaria treatment practices involves any or all of the following: (1) direct in-office observation of patient consultations; (2) review of patients’ health passports for malaria laboratory results and prescriptions; (3) quizzing HWs on national anti-malarial treatment guidelines; (4) reviewing dosing schedule of prescribed malaria prescriptions with patients to evaluate their understanding
Characteristics and outcomes for patients who completed the exit interview—Southern Malawi, 2015
| n/N | Weighted percent (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographics (years) | ||
| <5 | 723/2342 | 28.3 (21.8, 34.8) |
| ≥5 | 1619/2342 | 71.7 (65.2, 78.2) |
| Suspect malaria classification | ||
| Suspect malaria cases (both uncomplicated and severe) | 1695/2342 | 73.4 (70.2, 76.6) |
| Suspect uncomplicated malaria | 1605/1695 | 95.4 (94.2, 96.6) |
| Suspect severe malaria | 90/1695 | 4.6 (3.4, 5.8) |
| Symptoms spontaneously reported to HW by suspect malaria patients | ||
| Fever | 1146/1695 | 68.5 (64.0, 73.0) |
| When patient did not spontaneously report fever, HW asked about fever | 295/549 | 51.6 (46.0, 57.2) |
| Headache | 553/1695 | 33.4 (28.6, 38.2) |
| Vomiting | 284/1695 | 16.9 (14.3, 19.5) |
| Skin problem | 99/1695 | 5.5 (3.9, 6.9) |
| Testing for suspect uncomplicated malaria patients who attended HFs with diagnostic tests | ||
| Tested by either microscopy or RDT | 1072/1427 | 75.7 (68.9, 82.5) |
| Positive RDT or microscopy | 547/1072 | 53.2 (46.0, 60.4) |
| Medications administered, prescribed or dispensed to confirmed uncomplicated malaria patients | ||
| Treated with first- or second-line antimalarial (AM)a | 511/547 | 92.7 (85.4, 99.9) |
| Treated with other anti-malarialb | 12/547 | 4.7 (0.0, 11.9) |
| No anti-malarial | 24/547 | 2.6 (1.2, 4.0) |
| Medications administered, prescribed or dispensed to presumed uncomplicated malaria patients | ||
| Treated with first- or second-line AMa | 98/178 | 60.3 (45.1, 75.5) |
| Treated with other anti-malarialc | 5/178 | 2.8 (0.0, 8.3) |
| No anti-malarial | 75/178 | 36.8 (22.8, 50.8) |
| Suspect severe malaria | ||
| Received recommended pre-referral anti-malariald | 8/90 | 5.7 (0.3, 11.0) |
| Referred or told to get in-patient admission right away | 11/90 | 6.9 (1.9, 11.9) |
| Received pre-referral anti-malarial | 3/90 | 1.6 (0.0, 3.6) |
| Treated with other anti-malariale | 46/90 | 59.6 (46.4, 72.8) |
| No anti-malarial | 36/90 | 34.7 (22.4, 47.0) |
aFirst- or second-line AM refers to artemether-lumefantrine (AL) or artesunate-amodiaquine (ASAQ) for all except pregnant women in first trimester and children weighing <5 kg who get quinine. Numerator includes eight confirmed malaria patients who got both AL and intramuscular (IM) quinine and one confirmed malaria patient who got both AL and IM artesunate
bOral quinine (n = 6), IM quinine (n = 3), AL to women in first trimester (n = 2), SP (n = 1)
cAll given sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) none of whom was pregnant
dThree received IM artesunate, five received IM quinine
e42 patients received only AL, one received both AL and SP, one received ASAQ and two received oral quinine
Fig. 2Summary of appropriate malaria treatment practices among suspect malaria patients
Artemisinin combination therapy (artemether-lumefantrine or artesunate-amodiaquine) dispensing, dosing and patient knowledge for uncomplicated malaria patients
| n/N | Weighted percent (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Total number of uncomplicated (confirmed and presumed) malaria patients | 725/2342 | 33.0 (27.2, 38.8) |
| Received an ACT (AL or ASAQ)a | 609/725 | 84.9 (77.2, 92.5) |
| ACT dispensed | 534/609 | 88.9 (80.1, 97.7) |
| ACT correctly dosed when dispensedb | 505/534 | 94.9 (92.7, 97.2) |
| Type of ACT dispensed | ||
| AL dispensed | 517/534 | 97.2 (93.3, 100.0) |
| AL correctly dosed when dispensed | 490/534 | 92.5 (88.2, 96.8) |
| ASAQ dispensed | 17/534 | 2.8 (0.0, 6.7) |
| ASAQ correctly dosed when dispensedc | 16/17 | 93.6 (3.7, 100.0) |
| HWs provided patients with the following ACT counselling information | ||
| First dose of ACT given at HF | 72/534 | 16.8 (3.2, 30.3) |
| HW explained how to take ACT at home | 495/534 | 91.8 (88.7, 94.8) |
| HW advised what to do in case of vomiting within 30 min of taking ACT | 36/534 | 7.5 (4.8, 10.1) |
| HW instructed to complete all doses of ACT even if he/she feels better | 316/534 | 60.9 (52.7, 69.1) |
| HW instructed to take AL with food, milk or milk containing drinkd | 141/517 | 27.9 (20.2, 35.7) |
|
| ||
| Correct knowledge regarding all aspects of ACT dosinge | 404/534 | 78.1 (72.3, 83.8) |
| Knows correct amount of ACT (tablet or syrup) to take per dose | 460/534 | 85.9 (81.3, 90.6) |
| Knows total number of days to complete ACT dose | 473/534 | 90.6 (86.8, 94.3) |
| Knows correct number of AL doses to take per day | 474/534 | 89.5 (86.0, 93.0) |
a1 confirmed malaria patient had both AL and ASAQ dispensed; AL was the only ACT dispensed to presumed malaria patients
bASAQ dosing information was coded as correct for patients who received the correct strength or number of ASAQ tablets and for those with missing dosing information
c1 patient (a 5 years old child weighing 14 kg) received lower than recommended strength formulation for ASAQ
dOnly pertains to patients who were dispensed AL. Patients with ASAQ were not asked this question
eAspects of AL dosing were evaluated when the drug was dispensed and included patient knowledge of correct: number of AL tablets to take at each dose, number of AL doses to take per day and number of days to complete the AL dose. Aspects of correct ASAQ dosing included patient knowledge of correct number of ASAQ tablets to each for each dose and the total number of days to complete the entire ASAQ dose
Factors associated with appropriate testing among suspect uncomplicated malaria patients (N = 1427)
| Factors | Number of patients | Number tested (weighted %) | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) |
| Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient spontaneously reported these complaints to the HW | ||||||
| Fever | ||||||
| Yes | 950 | 784 (81.8) | 2.6 (1.6–4.3) | <0.0001 | 2.6 (1.7–4.0) | <0.0001 |
| No | 477 | 288 (62.9) | Ref | Ref | ||
| Headache | ||||||
| Yes | 481 | 380 (79.4) | 1.4 (0.9–1.9) | 0.055 | 1.5 (1.1–2.2) | 0.017 |
| No | 946 | 692 (73.8) | Ref | Ref | ||
| Vomiting | ||||||
| Yes | 223 | 194 (86.1) | 2.2 (1.2–4.2) | 0.016 | 2.0 (1.0–4.0) | 0.040 |
| No | 1204 | 878 (73.8) | Ref | Ref | ||
| Skin problem | ||||||
| Yes | 80 | 37 (49.0) | 0.3 (0.2–0.5) | <0.0001 | 0.4 (0.2–0.6) | 0.0001 |
| No | 1347 | 1035 (77.1) | Ref | Ref | ||
Ref means referent group
Interaction term included in the model. Other factors with p value ≥0.1 in the univariate analysis that were not included in the multivariable model were: (1) Patient-level factors: patient spontaneous report to the HW of malaria, chills, fatigue, joint pain, weakness or cough; (2) HW-level factors: HW age, number of patients seen by the HW, number of years of formal training received, number of years of clinical experience, latest training on malaria case management, access to the latest malaria treatment guidelines and supervision in the last 6 months; (3) HF-level factors: MoH vs CHAM operated HFs, availability of thermometers, number of patients at the HF and the number of HWs at the HF
Factors associated with appropriate treatment among presumed uncomplicated malaria patientsa (N = 178)
| Factors | Number of patients | Number treated (weighted %) | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) |
| Adjusted OR (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient spontaneously reported fever to the HW | ||||||
| Yes | 126 | 79 (68.6) | 3.5 (1.7–7.3) | 0.001 | 5.7 (1.9–17.6) | 0.002 |
| No | 52 | 19 (38.4) | Ref | Ref | ||
| Patient temperature (°C)—surveyor measured | 1.3 (1.0–1.7) | 0.032 | 1.5 (1.1–1.9) | 0.005 | ||
| HW age (years) | 1.0 (1.0–1.1) | 0.001 | 1.1 (1.0–1.1) | <0.0001 | ||
| Number of supervision visits | 1.1 (0.9–1.3) | 0.135 | 1.2 (1.0–1.4) | 0.029 | ||
Data from facilities unable to test patients at the time of the survey
aOnly statistically significant factors with p < 0.05 in the multivariable analysis have odds ratio estimates shown in the table above. Other factors included in the logistic regression model were: patient age in years, patient spontaneous complaint of cough and headache (which was a confounder). Other factors with p value ≥0.1 in the univariate analysis that were not included in the multivariable model were: (1) Patient-level factors: patient spontaneous report of malaria, vomiting, chills, fatigue, joint pain, skin problem, weakness or cough to the HW; (2) HW-level factors: Number of patients seen by the HW, number of years of formal training received, number of years of clinical experience, latest training on malaria case management, and access to the latest malaria treatment guidelines; (3) HF-level factors: MoH vs CHAM operated HFs, availability of thermometers, number of patients at the HF and the number of HWs at the HF