| Literature DB >> 28479634 |
Karsten Lunze1, Godfrey Biemba2, J Joseph Lawrence3, William B MacLeod4, Kojo Yeboah-Antwi4, Kebby Musokotwane5, Toyin Ajayi6, Simon Mutembo7, Chilunga Puta8, Duncan Earle8, Rick Steketee9, Davidson H Hamer4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate current practices and standards of evaluation and treatment of childhood febrile illness in Southern Province, Zambia.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28479634 PMCID: PMC5418822 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.16.170092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Fig. 1Flowchart showing the development of the study’s primary outcome, appropriate fever management
Characteristics of 24 health facilities surveyed, by facility type, Southern Province, Zambia, 2013
| Characteristic | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| HAHC ( | RHC ( | All facilities ( | |
| Physician, clinical officer or nurse | 4 (100.0) | 19 (95.0) | 23 (95.8) |
| Physician | 3 (75 .0) | 0 (0.0) | 3 (12.5) |
| Clinical officer or medical licentiate | 4 (100.0) | 5 (25.0) | 9 (37.5) |
| Midwife | 0 (0.0) | 9 (45.0) | 9 (37.5) |
| Nurse or registered nurse | 2 (50.0) | 18 (90.0) | 20 (83.3) |
| Other (EHT, CHA or CHW) | 1 (25.0) | 17 (85.0) | 18 (75.0) |
| Functional microscope | 3 (75.0) | 6 (30.0) | 9 (37.5) |
| Malaria RDTs | 4 (100.0) | 18 (90.0) | 22 (91.7) |
| Functional pulse oximeter | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Functional X-ray machine | 3 (75.0) | 1 (5.0) | 4 (16.7) |
| Respiratory rate counter or watch with indicator for seconds | 1 (25.0) | 5 (25.0) | 6 (25.0) |
| RDT wall chart displayed | 0 (0.0) | 5 (25.0) | 5 (20.8) |
| IMCI wall chart displayed | 0 (0.0) | 3 (15.0) | 3 (12.5) |
| AL dosing wall chart displayed | 0 (0.0) | 6 (30.0) | 6 (25.0) |
| At least one wall chart displayed (malaria RDT, AL dosing or IMCI) | 0 (0.0) | 10 (50.0) | 10 (41.7) |
| All three wall charts displayed (malaria RDT, AL dosing and IMCI) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (5.0) | 1 (4.2) |
| AL in stock on day of survey | 4 (100.0) | 20 (100.0) | 24 (100.0) |
| AL stock-outs in previous 12 months | 0 (0.0) | 2 (10.0) | 2 (8.3) |
| Amoxicillin in stock on day of survey | 3 (75.0) | 19 (95.0) | 22 (91.7) |
| Amoxicillin stock-outs in previous 12 months | 1 (25.0) | 8 (40.0) | 9 (37.5) |
AL: artemether-lumefantrine; CHA: community health assistant; CHW: community health worker; EHT: environmental health technician; HAHC: hospital affiliated health centre; ICMI: integrated management of childhood illness; RHC: rural health centre; RDT: rapid diagnostic test.
Health-care workers’ characteristics, training and skill assessment performance in 24 health facilities, Southern Province, Zambia, 2013
| Characteristic | Physician, clinical officer ( | Nurse ( | EHT ( | Othera ( | All health workers ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35.8 (2.5) | 32.5 (1.4) | 32.4 (2.4) | 38.0 (3.8) | 33.9 (1.1) | |
| 9 (75.0) | 11 (42.3) | 6 (75.0) | 4 (57.1) | 30 (56.6) | |
| 5.7 (2.2) | 6.1 (1.3) | 8.3 (2.5) | 8.0 (2.2) | 6.6 (0.9) | |
| 5.1 (1.7) | 3.7 (0.8) | 5.8 (2.5) | 7.9 (2.4) | 4.9 (0.7) | |
| 6 (50.0) | 11 (42.3) | 6 (75.0) | 4 (57.1) | 27 (50.9) | |
| Malaria case management,c no. (%) | 4 (33.3) | 3 (11.5) | 3 (37.5) | 1 (14.3) | 11 (20.8) |
| IMCI, no (%) | 7 (58.3) | 7 (26.9) | 1 (12.5) | 1 (14.3) | 16 (30.2) |
| iCCM, no. (%) | 3 (25.0) | 1 (3.8) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) | 5 (9.4) |
| At least one mCCM, IMCI or iCCM, no. (%) | 10 (83.3) | 11 (42.3) | 5 (62.5) | 1 (14.3) | 27 (50.9) |
| Integrated management of childhood illness guidelines, no. (%) | 3 (25.0) | 12 (46.2) | 2 (25.0) | 0 (0.0) | 17 (32.1) |
| Integrated community case management guidelines, no. (%) | 4 (33.3) | 8 (30.8) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) | 13 (24.5) |
| Malaria treatment guidelines, no. (%) | 2 (16.7) | 9 (34.6) | 1 (12.5) | 1 (14.3) | 13 (24.5) |
| IMCI danger signs and symptomsd | |||||
| At least three of seven items, no. (%) | 11 (91.7) | 26 (100.0) | 7 (87.5) | 6 (85.7) | 50 (94.3) |
| All seven items, no. (%) | 3 (25.0) | 4 (15.4) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) | 8 (15.1) |
| Correct disease classificatione | |||||
| At least three of seven items, no. (%) | 12 (100.0) | 23 (88.5) | 7 (87.5) | 4 (57.1) | 46 (86.8) |
| All seven items, no. (%) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0.(0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Correct treatmentf | |||||
| At least three of seven items, no. (%) | 2 (16.7) | 7 (26.9) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0.0) | 10 (18.9) |
| All seven items, no. (%) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0. (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
EHT: environmental health technician; iCCM: integrated community case management; IMCI : integrated management of childhood illness; mCCM : malaria community case management; SE: standard error.
a Includes 4 cleaning and maintenance staff, 1 community health assistant, 1 community health worker and 1 data clerk.
b Proportion received in-service training (previous 3 years).
c Malaria case management according to the guidelines based on the Integrated technical guidelines for frontline health workers.
d Correctly asked or checked for the 7 IMCI danger signs and symptoms according to the Integrated technical guidelines for frontline health workers.
e Correct classification was defined according to the Integrated technical guidelines for frontline health workers.
f Correct “treatment/prescription” was defined according to the integrated technical guidelines.
Health-care workers’ assessment of 161 children with febrile illness, by type of health worker, Southern Province, Zambia, 2013
| Assessment | No. (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physician, clinical officer ( | Nurses ( | Other cadresa ( | All encounters ( | |
| Able to drink or breastfeed | 32 (53.3) | 42 (53.8) | 12 (57.1) | 86 (54.1) |
| Vomits consistently | 28 (47.5) | 39 (50.6) | 9 (42.9) | 76 (48.4) |
| Had convulsions or is convulsing now | 18 (31.0) | 24 (30.8) | 8 (38.1) | 50 (31.8) |
| Unconscious or lethargic | 27 (45.8) | 21 (26.9) | 2 (9.5) | 50 (31.6) |
| Health worker asks or checks for at least one of the danger signs | 54 (88.5) | 65 (83.3) | 14 (63.6) | 133 (82.6) |
| Health worker asks or checks for at least two of the danger signs | 31 (50.8) | 36 (46.2) | 9 (40.9) | 76 (47.2) |
| Health worker asks or checks for all four of the danger signs | 4 (6.6) | 7 (9.0) | 2 (9.1) | 13 (8.1) |
| Assess for cough or difficulty breathing | 49 (83.1) | 66 (84.6) | 19 (90.5) | 134 (84.8) |
| Assess for ear symptoms | 21 (34.4) | 15 (19.2) | 10 (47.6) | 46 (28.8) |
| Assess for neck stiffness | 3 (5.1) | 3 (3.9) | 0 (0.0) | 6 (3.8) |
| Assess for pallor | 27 (45.0) | 21 (27.3) | 5 (23.8) | 53 (33.5) |
| Assess all | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Appropriate assessment of febrile illnessb | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Better than average assessment of febrile illnessc | 11 (18.0) | 12 (15.4) | 0 (0.0) | 23 (14.3) |
a Includes 4 cleaning and maintenance staff, 1 community health assistant, 1 community health worker and 1 data clerk.
b Health worker carried out all physical examination and history taking tasks according to the Integrated technical guidelines for frontline health workers.
c Health worker carried out more than half of the specified physical examination and history taking tasks according to guidelines.
Note: Represented are the percentages of those observed to perform certain fever assessment skills, for each health-worker cadre, respectively. The total column denominators refer to the number of cases seen by each health-care worker cadre, summing up to clinical encounters with a line total of 161 children included in the study.
Health-care workers’ diagnosis and treatment of pneumonia as reported in exit interviews with caregivers, Southern Province, Zambia, 2013
| Evaluation characteristic | Total no. of interviews | No. of children (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Cough/difficulty breathing with respiratory rate counted | 79 | 22 (27.8) |
| Fast breathing present in those checked | 43 | 19 (44.2) |
| Appropriate pneumonia diagnosisa | 19 | 4 (21.1) |
| Appropriate treatmentb | 19 | 9 (47.4) |
| Inappropriate treatmentc | 19 | 11 (45.8) |
a Children having tachypnea.
b Fast breathing, treated with amoxicillin.
C Not fast breathing, treated with amoxicillin.
Note: Exit interviews with caregivers were used to collect information on demographic characteristics of febrile children, chief complaint for the visit and counselling and drug dispensing practices of health workers attending to children. Children’s clinic card was reviewed to get information on care received.
Health-care workers’ diagnosis and treatment of malaria as reported in exit interviews with caregivers, Southern Province, Zambia, 2013
| Evaluation characteristic | Total no. of interviews | No. of children (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Tested only with RDT, where availablea | 153 | 84 (54.9) |
| Positive RDT result | 84 | 7 (8.3) |
| Tested with RDT or microscopy | 161 | 92 (57.1) |
| Positive RDT or microscopy test result | 92 | 7 (7.6) |
| Accurate classificationb | 7 | 7 (100) |
| Inaccurate classificationc | 85 | 11 (12.9) |
| Accurate malaria diagnosisd | 18 | 7 (38.9) |
| Accurate non-malaria diagnosise | 154 | 74 (48.1) |
| Classified as malaria and treated with ACT | 18 | 8 (44.4) |
| Appropriate malaria treatmentf | 7 | 7 (100) |
| Appropriate non-malaria treatmentg | 154 | 153 (99.4) |
ACT: artemisinin-based combination therapy; RDT: malaria rapid diagnostic test.
a Ninety-two per cent of all facilities have malaria rapid diagnostic test capability.
b Positive RDT or microscopy results classified as malaria.
c Negative RDT or microscopy results classified as malaria.
d Children who actually had malaria diagnosed as having malaria.
e Patients who don’t have malaria among all who tested negative for malaria.
f ACT given where RDT or microscopy is positive.
g No ACT when RDT or microscopy is negative.
Note: Exit interviews with caregivers were used to collect information on demographic characteristics of febrile children, chief complaint for the visit and counselling and drug dispensing practices of health workers attending to children. Children’s clinic card was reviewed to get information on care received.