| Literature DB >> 28274962 |
Helen E D Burchett1, Baptiste Leurent2, Frank Baiden3, Kimberly Baltzell4, Anders Björkman5, Katia Bruxvoort1, Siân Clarke6, Deborah DiLiberto7, Kristina Elfving8,9,10, Catherine Goodman1, Heidi Hopkins6, Sham Lal6, Marco Liverani1, Pascal Magnussen11, Andreas Mårtensson12, Wilfred Mbacham13, Anthony Mbonye14, Obinna Onwujekwe15, Denise Roth Allen16, Delér Shakely5,17, Sarah Staedke7, Lasse S Vestergaard18,19, Christopher J M Whitty7, Virginia Wiseman1,20, Clare I R Chandler1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The overuse of antimalarial drugs is widespread. Effective methods to improve prescribing practice remain unclear. We evaluated the impact of 10 interventions that introduced rapid diagnostic tests for malaria (mRDTs) on the use of tests and adherence to results in different contexts.Entities:
Keywords: TROPICAL MEDICINE
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28274962 PMCID: PMC5353269 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Cases included in analysis
| Study | Study name | Country | Providers targeted | Cases* | Published results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afgh1 | Strategies for expanding access to quality malaria diagnosis in south-central Asia where malaria incidence is low | Afghanistan | Government primary care providers | Afgh1/a: training; patients individually randomised to receive either mRDT or established microscopy, Eastern province | |
| Afgh1/b: training; patients individually randomised to receive either mRDT or recently introduced microscopy, Northern province | |||||
| Afgh1/c: training; patients individually randomised to receive either mRDT or clinical diagnosis (no microscopy available), Northern province | |||||
| Cam1 | Cost-effectiveness of interventions to support the introduction of malaria rapid diagnostic tests in Cameroon | Cameroon | Government and mission providers (in hospitals and primary care) | Cam1/a1: basic training, Bamenda | |
| Cam1/b1: basic training, Yaoundé | |||||
| Cam1/a2: enhanced training, Bamenda | |||||
| Cam1/b2: enhanced training, Yaoundé | |||||
| Ghan1 | How the use of rapid diagnostic tests influences clinicians' decision to prescribe ACTs | Ghana | Government primary care providers | Ghan1/a: training; patients individually randomised to receive either mRDT or microscopy | |
| Government and private primary care providers | Ghan1/b: training; patients individually randomised to receive either mRDT or clinical diagnosis | ||||
| Nig1 | Costs and effects of strategies to improve malaria diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria | Nigeria | Government primary care providers, private pharmacies and private medicine dealers | Nig1/a1: basic training, Enugu | |
| Nig1/b1: basic training, Udi | |||||
| Nig1/a2: enhanced training, Enugu | |||||
| Nig1/b2: enhanced training, Udi | |||||
| Nig1/a3: enhanced training + school activities, Enugu | |||||
| Nig1/b3: enhanced training + school activities, Udi | |||||
| Tanz1 | IMPACT 2: Evaluating policies in Tanzania to improve malaria diagnosis and treatment | Tanzania | Government healthcare providers (in hospitals and primary care) | Tanz1/a: standard MoH† training, Mwanza, moderate transmission | |
| Tanz1/b: standard MoH training, Mbeya, low transmission | |||||
| Tanz1/c: standard MoH training, Mtwara, moderate transmission | |||||
| Tanz2 | Targeting ACT drugs: the TACT trial | Tanzania | Government primary care providers | Tanz2/a1: pilot study, low transmission | |
| Tanz2/b1: pilot study, moderate transmission | |||||
| Tanz2/2: basic training | |||||
| Tanz2/3: enhanced training | |||||
| Tanz2/4: enhanced training + patient sensitisation | |||||
| Tanz3 | Effectiveness of malaria rapid diagnostic tests in fever patients attending primary healthcare facilities in Zanzibar | Tanzania | Government primary care providers | Tanz3: enhanced training, Zanzibar | |
| Uga1 | The PRIME trial: improving health centres to reduce childhood malaria in Uganda | Uganda | Government primary healthcare providers | Uga1: training, Tororo | |
| Uga2 | Use of rapid diagnostic tests to improve malaria treatment in the community in Uganda | Uganda | Community health volunteers | Uga2/a: training, low transmission | |
| Uga2/b: training, moderate transmission | |||||
| Uga3 | Introducing rapid diagnostic tests in drug shops to improve the targeting of malaria treatment | Uganda | Private drug shop vendors | Uga3: training, Mukono |
*The initial letters refer to the study country, the first number refers to the (country-specific) study number, the subsequent letter refers to the specific context if a study took place in multiple geographical or epidemiological settings and the final number refers to the intervention arm.
†MoH, Ministry of Health.
Intervention content
| Scenario | mRDT/malaria training | Supervision | mRDT/ACT supplies | Other intervention activities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Afgh1/a | One and a half day training, following the national training package. This covered performing mRDTs (most, but not all, practiced testing) and prescribing antimalarials | None | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Afgh1/b | ||||
| Afgh1/c | ||||
| Cam1/a1 | One day, didactic session covered three modules: malaria diagnosis, mRDTs, and malaria treatment | Monthly | mRDTs and ACTs supplied by study | None |
| Cam1/b1 | ||||
| Cam1/a2 | Same as Cam1/1, plus: | Monthly | mRDTs and ACTs supplied by study | None |
| Cam1/b2 | ||||
| Ghan1/a | Two day training about the sensitivity and specificity of mRDTs, alternative causes of febrile illness and the Ghana national guidelines (which indicated presumptive treatment for children who are <5 years old) | None, but study team were present | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Ghan1/b | ||||
| Nig1/a1 | Half day demonstration on how to use mRDTs, which included practising conducting one test. They also received a copy of the WHO job aid, which shows the steps in using an mRDT | None | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Nig1/b1 | ||||
| Nig1/a2 | Same as Nig1/1, plus: | Monthly | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Nig1/b2 | ||||
| Nig1/a3 | Same as Nig1/2 | Monthly | mRDTs supplied by study | School-based activities |
| Nig1/b3 | ||||
| Tanz1/a | Two day training (standard MoH), covering performing mRDTs (including practical) and prescribing antimalarials | Routine MoH supervision only | mRDTs supplied by MoH | None |
| Tanz1/b | ||||
| Tanz1/c | ||||
| Tanz2/a1 | One day training on how to use the mRDT and read the result. Antimalarial drug use guidelines were reviewed and job aids provided | None | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Tanz2/b1 | ||||
| Tanz2/2 | Two day, didactic, MoH training on how to use mRDTs, including practical | Six-weekly, focused on supplies and reporting | mRDTs supplied by study | None |
| Tanz2/3 | Same as Tanz2/2, plus: | Six-weekly, focused on supplies and reporting | mRDTs supplied by study | SMS feedback on own mRDT uptake and adherence at 5 months |
| Tanz2/4 | Same as Tanz2/3 | Six-weekly, focused on supplies and reporting | mRDTs supplied by study | SMS feedback on own mRDT uptake and adherence at 5 months |
| Tanz3 | Six to 11 days IMCI training (depending on whether refresher training or for new health workers) which included malaria diagnosis and treatment, plus 1-week study-specific training (including good clinical practice, provision of informed consent, performance and interpretation of mRDT according to the manufacturer's instructions). One day of the IMCI training focused specifically on malaria. Training covered communication skills | None | mRDTs and ACTs supplied by MoH, with study back up in the case of stockouts | IMCI training, additional study salary for providers |
| Uga1 | Two day training session followed a week later by on-site training in facilities. Training was interactive and included performing and reading an mRDT, management of a patient with fever and either a positive or negative mRDT as well as patient communication. All health workers were invited to attend the training | Supervision at 6 weeks and 6 months | mRDTs supplied by MoH, with study back up in the case of stockouts | Training on patient-centred services; training in-charges in health centre management |
| Uga2/a | Four day interactive training, covering performing and reading an mRDT, how to prescribe antimalarials, how to deal with negative cases and communication skills. Providers were also given pictorial job aids | Close supervision for first 6 months (prior to evaluation) | mRDTs and ACTs supplied by study | Community sensitisation |
| Uga2/b | ||||
| Uga3 | Four day interactive training to all drug shop vendors, which covered performing and reading mRDTs, prescribing antimalarials, how to deal with mRDT negatives and communicating and negotiating with patients | Close supervision for first 2 months (prior to evaluation) | mRDTs and ACTs supplied by study | Community sensitisation |
Figure 1(A) Uptake of malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) (% patients with fever or history of fever who were tested for malaria with an mRDT).(B) Adherence to positive mRDT results (% of patients with a positive mRDT who did receive ACTs). (C) Adherence to negative mRDTs (% of patients with a negative mRDT results who did NOT receive antimalarials).