| Literature DB >> 29619211 |
Paul J Krezanoski1,2, David R Bangsberg3, Alexander C Tsai4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs) are recommended for use by 3.4 billion people at risk of malaria world-wide. Policy makers rely on measurements of ITN use to optimize malaria prevention efforts. Self-reports are the most common means of assessing ITN use, but self-reports may be biased in a way that reduces their reliability as a proxy for ITN adherence. This meta-analysis compared self-reported and two methods which are more objective measures of ITN use to explore whether self-reports overestimate actual ITN adherence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29619211 PMCID: PMC5878861 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.08.010411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Multi-step cascade for effective malaria prevention with insecticide-treated bednets (ITNs).
Figure 2Search strategy (adapted from PRISMA 2009 flowchart).
Studies included in meta-analysis (sorted by date)
| Study | Adherent by SR | Total sample for SR | Percent adherent by SR | Adherent by Obj | Total sample for Obj | Percent adherent by Obj | Percentage point difference (SR-Obj) | Difference relative to Obj | Transmission season of survey | Type of objective measure | Study population | Unit of analysis | Definitions of ITN use | Comparable measures of ITN use with SR and Obj methods | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Leake et al., Malaysia (1989) | 281 | 548 | 51.3% | 189 | 494 | 38.3% | 13.0% | 34.0% | Low | Night visit; 2100-2400 | General | Indiv | Household representative reported | Individual observed under ITN | Obj then SR the following day | Yes | No explanation for missing objective measures |
| 2 | Sexton et al., Kenya (1990) | 141 | 166 | 84.9% | 119 | 166 | 71.5% | 13.3% | 18.5% | Holoendemic | Night visit; 2100-2200 | Children under 5 years | HH | Households claiming use every night in last 7 days | Using net at night visit (avg two measures 70% and 73%) | SR use every day last 7 nights vs observed use | Yes | N/A |
| 3 | Leake et al., Malaysia (1994) | 311 | 676 | 46.0% | 198 | 537 | 36.9% | 8.8% | 23.8% | Low | Night visit; 2100-2400 | General | Indiv | Household representative reported | Individual observed under ITN | Obj then SR the following day | Yes | No explanation for missing objective measures |
| 4 | Linhua et al., China (1994) | 178 | 226 | 78.8% | 156 | 226 | 69.0% | 9.7% | 14.1% | Unclear | Night visit; 2300 | General | HH | Household representative reported | Observed utilization of ITN | Unclear when Obj occurred relative to SR | Yes | N/A |
| 5 | Fraser-Hurt et al., Tanzania (1999) | 353 | 360 | 98.0% | 188 | 190 | 98.9% | -0.9% | -0.9% | Dry season | Night visit; 0500-0800 | Children under 5 years | Indiv | Clinic-reported compliance | Children observed inside ITN | Monthly SR vs surprise Obj | Yes | No explanation for only 229 visits and 17% unavailable |
| 6 | Spencer et al., Uganda (2004) | 708 | 1,245 | 56.9% | 682 | 1,245 | 54.8% | 2.1% | 3.8% | Low | Visual inspection during day; 1000-1600 | General | Indiv | Household representative reported | Hanging bednet in household of reported use | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
| 7 | Grabowsky et al., Ghana (2005) | 168 | 257 | 65.4% | 170 | 249 | 68.3% | -2.9% | -4.3% | High | Visual confirm during day, unclear time | Children under 5 years | Indiv | Household representative reported | Bednet observed hung over child’s bed | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | No explanation for missing objective measures |
| 8 | Frey et al., Burkina Faso (2006) | 177 | 180 | 98.3% | 142 | 180 | 78.9% | 19.4% | 24.6% | High | Night visit; 2100 or 0500 | Children under 5 years | Indiv | Full-time use the previous night | Study child observed under bednet | Obj then SR measure the following day | Yes | N/A |
| 9 | Fettene et al., Ethiopia (2009) | 77 | 119 | 64.7% | 60 | 119 | 69.9% | 14.3% | 28.3% | Low | Visual confirm during day | General | HH | Reporting every night use | Households with nets observed hanging | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
| 10 | Cohee et al., Uganda (2009) | 123 | 128 | 63.1% | 10 | 13 | 50.4% | 19.2% | 24.9% | Low | Visual confirm during day | HIV positive patients | HH | At least one person used ITN previous night | Households with nets observed mounted | Unclear when Obj occurred relative to SR | Yes | Randomly selected households for observations |
| 11 | Becker-Dreps et al., DRC (2009) | 87 | 103 | 84.4% | 72 | 103 | 70.0% | 14.4% | 20.6% | Unclear | Visual confirm during day | Pregnant women | Indiv | “[E]very day or almost every day” | ITNs hanging “in the correct position” | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
| 12 | Gobena et al., Ethiopia (2010) | 630 | 1,879 | 33.5% | 392 | 1,879 | 20.9% | 12.7% | 60.7% | High | Visual confirm during day | General | HH | Household reported use the night before | ITN hung “above bed or sleeping place” | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
| 13 | Macintyre et al., Zambia (2011) | High | Visual confirm during day | Children under 5 years | HH | At least one person used ITN previous night | At least one ITN observed hanging | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A | ||||||||
| 14 | Dori et al., Ethiopia (2012) | 367 | 609 | 60.3% | 228 | 609 | 37.4% | 22.8% | 61.0% | High | Visual confirm during day | General | HH | Report currently “using a net” | Observed hung from “ceiling over a bed” | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
| 15 | C-Change et al., Ethiopia (2012) | Low | Visual confirm during day | General | HH | Someone slept under bednet previous night | At least one hanging “from wall or ceiling” | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A | ||||||||
| 16 | Deressa et al., Ethiopia (2014) | 524 | 755 | 69.4% | 567 | 755 | 75.1% | -5.7% | -7.6% | High | Visual confirm during day | General | HH | Someone slept under bednet previous night | Households with bednet hung over bed | Concurrent measure of SR and Obj | Yes | N/A |
SR – self-reported measure, Obj – objective measure, Indiv – individual, HH – Household, ITN – insecticide-treated net, N/A – not applicable
Definition of comparable self-reported and objectively measured ITN use for inclusion
| Objectively measured ITN use | ||
|---|---|---|
| Individual level | The individual’s use of the ITN | The individual’s sleeping area |
| Household level | At least one ITN in use in household | At least one sleeping area in household |
ITN – insecticide-treated net
Figure 3Meta-analysis of discrepancies between self-reported and objectively measured insecticide-treated bednets (ITN) use.
Figure 4Stratified meta-analysis of discrepancies between self-reported and objectively measured insecticide-treated bednets (ITN) use by type of objective measure.