| Literature DB >> 29695231 |
Grace N Awantang1, Stella O Babalola2, Hannah Koenker2, Kathleen A Fox2, Michael Toso2, Nan Lewicky2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Malagasy Ministry of Health aimed to achieve 80% coverage of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria among pregnant women (IPTp) in targeted districts by 2015. However, IPTp coverage rates of have remained fairly static over the past few years.Entities:
Keywords: Correlates; Determinants; IPTp; Ideation; Madagascar; Malaria; Pregnancy; Provider; SP
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29695231 PMCID: PMC5918989 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2308-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Prevalence of parasitemia by microscopy by malaria transmission zones (adapted from MIS 2013). The six surveyed districts represent three different transmission zones with varying parasitemia rates among children under 5 years old
Sample per district
| District | Clusters | Eligible households | Mothers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ambovombe | 22 | 210 | 211 |
| Bekily | 8 | 55 | 55 |
| Brickaville | 10 | 99 | 99 |
| Manakara | 20 | 218 | 218 |
| Morombe | 12 | 120 | 120 |
| Marovoay | 18 | 206 | 207 |
| Total | 90 | 908 | 910 |
Question items used to measure IPTp/ANC ideation among female caregivers
| Ideational index and corresponding factors | Question/Likert-scale statement |
|---|---|
| General malaria ideation index | |
| Interpersonal communication about risk of malaria | In the past year, have you discussed malaria in pregnancy with your spouse or friends? |
| Malaria knowledge | What causes malaria? |
| What are some things that can happen to you when you have malaria? | |
| What are the things that people can do to stop them from getting malaria? | |
| Perceived severity of malaria | I don’t worry about malaria because it can be easily treated* |
| Every case of malaria can potentially lead to death* | |
| When my child has a fever, I almost always worry that it might be malaria* | |
| When someone I know gets malaria, I usually expect them to completely recover in a few days* | |
| When my child has a fever, I usually wait a couple of days before going to a health provider* | |
| My children are so healthy that they would be able to recover from a case of malaria* | |
| Only weak children can die from malaria* | |
| Perceived susceptibility of malaria | During the rainy season, I worry almost every day that someone in my family will get malaria* |
| People in this community only get malaria during rainy season* | |
| People only get malaria when there are lots of mosquitoes* | |
| Self-efficacy to prevent malaria | I could probably easily protect myself from getting malaria* |
| I could probably easily protect my children from getting malaria* | |
| IPTp/ANC ideation index | |
| Descriptive norm | Generally, how many women in your community receive at least four check-ups from a health provider when they are pregnant? |
| Interpersonal communication | In the past year, have you discussed malaria in pregnancy with your spouse or friends? |
| IPTp knowledge | What is the name of the medicine that is given to pregnant women to keep them from getting malaria? |
| When should a pregnant woman start to take this medicine to keep from getting malaria? | |
| How many times during her pregnancy should a woman receive this medicine? | |
| Attitudes toward IPTp/ANC | When a woman thinks she is pregnant, she should see a health provider as soon as possible* |
| Pregnant women often feel sick when they take medicine on an empty stomach* | |
| Even if a woman thinks she may be pregnant, she should wait a few months to know for certain before she sees a health provider* | |
| Health care providers will only give a pregnant woman medicine if they know for certain that it is not harmful to her or to her baby* | |
| Response efficacy | Pregnant women are still at risk for malaria even if they take the medicine that is meant to keep them from getting malaria* |
| Participation in health care decisions | In your household, who usually makes decisions about health care for yourself—you, your spouse, you and your spouse, or someone else? |
The question responses that were considered in creating each index appear in italics
Statements without response options were responded to with a four-point Likert scale
ANC antenatal care, IPTp intermittent preventive treatment for malaria in pregnancy, SP sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine
Indicators marked with an asterisk (*) are from 2014 RBM Malaria Behavior Change Communication Indicator Reference Guide [31]
Household and district characteristics of mothers, Madagascar 2014
| %/Mean (range) | n | |
|---|---|---|
| Household | ||
| Mean household size | 5.3 (2–20) | 910 |
| Household wealth quintile | ||
| Lowest | 24.6% | 224 |
| Second | 20.6% | 187 |
| Third | 18.8% | 171 |
| Fourth | 18.0% | 164 |
| Highest | 18.0% | 164 |
| District | ||
| Ambovombe | 23.2% | 211 |
| Bekily | 6.4% | 55 |
| Brickaville | 10.9% | 99 |
| Manakara | 24.0% | 218 |
| Morombe | 23.2% | 120 |
| Marovoay | 22.8% | 207 |
| Malaria transmission zone | ||
| Sub-desert | 23.2% | 211 |
| Tropical | 42.0% | 382 |
| Equatorial | 34.8% | 317 |
Individual characteristics of mothers, Madagascar 2014
| %/Mean (range) | n | |
|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic characteristics | ||
| Age (years) | ||
| 18–24 | 46.5% | 423 |
| 25–34 | 36.7% | 334 |
| 35–44 | 16.3% | 148 |
| 44–50 | 0.6% | 5 |
| Educational level | ||
| No formal school | 35.2% | 318 |
| Some primary school | 30.6% | 277 |
| Completed primary school | 25.4% | 230 |
| Middle school or higher | 8.8% | 79 |
| Religion | ||
| Christian | 68.4% | 622 |
| Traditional | 23.6% | 215 |
| Muslim | 1.4% | 13 |
| Other | 6.6% | 60 |
| Married or living with partner | 82.4% | 740 |
| Ideational characteristics | ||
| General malaria ideation | 3.0 (0–5) | 910 |
| IPTp/ANC ideation | 1.8 (0–5) | 910 |
| Malaria message exposure | ||
| Sources of exposure | ||
| | 25.7% | 234 |
| | 27.5% | 250 |
| Radio | 23.7% | 216 |
| Family/friend | 4.6% | 42 |
| Television | 2.4% | 29 |
| Mean source index | 1 (0–5) | n/a |
| Level of source exposure to malaria messages | ||
| No exposure (0) | 41.8% | 380 |
| Low exposure (1) | 32.9% | 299 |
| High exposure (2–5) | 25.4% | 231 |
| ANC attendance | ||
| Number of ANC visits | 3.4 (0–11) | 910 |
| No ANC visits | 12.9% | 117 |
| One ANC visit | 3.6% | 33 |
| Two ANC visits | 8.7% | 79 |
| Three ANC visits | 19.2% | 175 |
| Four or more ANC visits | 55.6% | 506 |
Multilevel correlates of IPTp2 in targeted districts, Madagascar 2014
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed effects | ||
| Individual factors | ||
| Education level | ||
| No formal school (RC) | 1 | |
| Some primary school | 1.05 (0.38) | |
| Completed primary school | 2.13 (0.71)* | |
| Middle school or higher | 1.03 (0.49) | |
| IPTp/ANC ideation | 1.29 (0.14)** | |
| Level of source exposure | ||
| No exposure (RC) | 1 | |
| Low exposure | 1.91 (0.55)* | |
| High exposure | 1.73 (0.55) | |
| Number of ANC visits | 1.26 (0.09)** | |
| District | ||
| Manakara (RC) | 1 | |
| Brickaville | 7.87 (4.63)*** | |
| Bekily | 4.70 (3.40)* | |
| Morombe | 3.89 (2.27)* | |
| Marovoay | 6.32 (3.27)*** | |
| Ambovombe | 4.25 (2.35)** | |
| Random effects | ||
| Cluster-level variance | 0.90 | 0.69 |
| Intraclass correlation | 0.215 | 0.174 |
| Log likelihood | − 318.06 | − 287.20 |
| AIC | 640.1 | 602.4 |
| n | 910 | 904 |
Intermittent treatment of malaria in pregnancy is defined as two doses or more of SP, at least one of which was obtained during an ANC visit
AIC Akaikie’s Information Criterion, ANC antenatal care, IPTp intermittent preventive treatment for malaria in pregnancy, OR odds ratio, RC reference category, SE standard error, SP sulfadoxine–pyrimethamine
* p < 0.05, ** < 0.01, *** < 0.001