| Literature DB >> 32133163 |
Katherine E Halliday1, Stefan S Witek-McManus1, Charles Opondo2, Austin Mtali3, Elizabeth Allen2, Andrew Bauleni4, Saidi Ndau5, Emmanuel Phondiwa6, Doreen Ali7, Virginia Kachigunda8, John H Sande7, Mpumulo Jawati9, Allison Verney9, Tiyese Chimuna10, David Melody10, Helen Moestue11, Natalie Roschnik11, Simon J Brooker1, Don P Mathanga4.
Abstract
Introduction: Evidence indicates children who suffer from ill-health are less likely to attend or complete schooling. Malaria is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in school-age children. However, they are less likely to receive malaria treatment at health facilities and evidence for how to improve schoolchildren's access to care is limited. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of a programme of school-based malaria case management on schoolchildren's attendance, health and education.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Malawi; Plasmodium falciparum; artemisinin-based combination therapy; case management; malaria; rapid diagnostic tests; schools; teachers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32133163 PMCID: PMC7042571 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Study design and timeline. LTK, Learner Treatment Kit.
Baseline school, child and household characteristics by study group for 2667 children
| Characteristic; n (%) * | Control | Intervention |
| School characteristics † | 23 schools | 27 schools |
| Children sampled per school | ||
| No. of children sampled, median (range) | 55 (31–64) | 56 (22–65) |
| School size (enrolment) | ||
| No. of children enrolled, mean (SD) | 1140.30 (550.03) | 968.71 (375.69) |
| School programme | ||
| Feeding | 2 (8.7%) | 6 (22.2%) |
| Deworming | 16 (72.7%) | 20 (74.1%) |
| Malaria control | 12 (54.5%) | 9 (33.3%) |
| School facilities | ||
| Water and sanitation | 7 (31.8%) | 7 (25.9%) |
| Gender-separated toilets | 20 (90.9%) | 23 (85.2%) |
| Hand-washing facilities | 8 (36.4%) | 14 (51.9%) |
| Child characteristics † | 1224 children | 1443 children |
| Age in years | ||
| Mean (SD) | 11.72 (3.17) | 11.88 (3.13) |
| 5–9 | 313 (25.6%) | 347 (24.1%) |
| 10–12 | 372 (30.4%) | 430 (29.8%) |
| 13 or more | 539 (44.0%) | 666 (46.2%) |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 587 (48.0%) | 684 (47.4%) |
| Female | 637 (52.0%) | 759 (52.6%) |
| Anthropometric z scores | ||
| Weight for age, mean (SD) | −1.03 (1.06) | −1.12 (1.18) |
| Height for age, mean (SD) | −1.31 (1.25) | −1.47 (1.22) |
| Body mass index for age, mean (SD) | −0.67 (1.02) | −0.67 (0.85) |
| Nutritional status | ||
| Underweight | 66 (16.8%) | 80 (18.4%) |
| Stunted | 308 (25.4%) | 460 (32.1%) |
| Thin | 76 (6.3%) | 93 (6.5%) |
| Health status | ||
| No. with | 692 (56.4%) | 909 (63.0%) |
| Parasite density parasites/µl, mean (SD) | 716.76 (2832.41) | 743.80 (2225.41) |
| No. of anaemic children (%) | 388 (31.7%) | 476 (33.0%) |
| Haemoglobin concentration g/L, mean (SD) | 124.87 (15.12) | 125.24 (15.98) |
| Bednet use | ||
| Used a bednet last night (%) | 414 (33.9%) | 446 (31.0%) |
| Educational assessments | ||
| Sustained attention score, mean (SD) | 0.03 (1.01) | −0.03 (0.99) |
| Numeracy test score, mean (SD) | 0.07 (1.02) | −0.06 (0.98) |
| Literacy test score, mean (SD) | −0.03 (1.05) | 0.03 (0.96) |
| Household characteristics † | ||
| Parental education | ||
| No schooling | 195 (16.9%) | 241 (17.7%) |
| Primary schooling | 788 (68.2%) | 970 (71.1%) |
| Secondary schooling or higher | 173 (15.0%) | 153 (11.2%) |
| Socioeconomic status | ||
| Poorest | 221 (20.0%) | 282 (21.0%) |
| Poor | 243 (22.0%) | 261 (19.4%) |
| Median | 199 (18.0%) | 323 (24.0%) |
| Less poor | 201 (18.2%) | 249 (18.5%) |
| Least poor | 243 (22.0%) | 232 (17.2%) |
*% of non-missing children in each study group presented for categorised data. For continuous data mean (SD) is presented
†All characteristics have less than 2% missing data with the exception of following indicators: stunted, thin and underweight.
SD, standard deviation.
Figure 2Trial participant flow diagram. LTK, Learner Treatment Kit: Fifty-eight schools were randomised to either receive the LTK programme or act as controls. No schools discontinued the intervention. Only classes 2, 4 and 6 were included in the spot check assessments and were included in the follow-up education and parasitology assessments. The additional children from classes 1, 3, 5 and 7 were included in the teacher-recorded registers in term 1 and a subsample was included in the follow-up education and parasitology assessments
Summary of LTK consultations by school term
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| Dec-Mar 2014¶ | Rainy | 12 654 | 9074 (71.7) | 9909 (78.3) | 7651 (60.5) [77.2] | 7388 (58.5) [96.6] |
| May-Jul 2014 | Post-rainy | 5665 | 4154 (73.3) | 4503 (79.5) | 3678 (64.9) [81.7] | 3535 (62.4) [96.1] |
| Sept-Nov 2014 | Dry | 5772 | 2996 (51.9) | 3510 (60.8) | 2068 (35.8) [58.9] | 1956 (33.9) [94.6] |
| Dec-Mar 2015 | Rainy | 8594 | 5082 (59.1) | 5608 (65.3) | 4157 (48.4) [74.1] | 3876 (45.1) [93.2] |
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Total number of unique consultations, number eligible (ie, reporting relevant symptoms) for an RDT, number tested by RDT, number testing malaria-positive by RDT, number treated with ACT for RDT and tested by RDT; displayed as a percentage of all unique consultations. Numbers in square brackets denote test positivity rate and percentage of confirmed cases treated.
*Includes those eligible for RDT who reported fever plus any of headache, vomiting, diarrhoea, dehydration, nausea, stomach ache, weakness and cough; excludes those eligible for RDT who reported fever plus only general aches, muscle/joint pains or loss of appetite.
†Includes those tested in the absence of fever plus one other relevant symptom (n=2969, 12.6%) and those presumed to be tested by RDT—where RDT results are recorded but data for RDT performed are missing (n=187, 0.6%).
‡Includes those presumed to be positive by RDT—where RDT was performed and treatment was recorded but data for RDT results are missing.
§Includes those treated in the absence of RDT conducted, and those treated with RDT-negative result.
¶Includes consultations conducted in November 2013 (n=499).
AL, artemether lumefantrine; LTK, Learner Treatment Kit; RDT, rapid diagnostic test.
Consultations attended by boys and girls
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| Children attending at least one consultation, total | 846 | 1165 | 1.78 (1.58 to 2.00) | <0.001 | 1.81 (1.60 to 2.05) | <0.001 |
| Consultations per child, mean (SE) | 0.63 (1.17) | 1.02 (1.54) | ||||
| Overall number of consultations attended | 1527 | 2471 | ||||
Numbers, unadjusted and adjusted ORs for attending at least one consultation by girls relative to boys in the randomly sampled children followed throughout implementation.
Unadjusted: All children with outcome measures, not adjusted for any demographic or study design characteristics.
Adjusted: for age, school size, school flooding and school programmes considered in stratification and for school flooding in January 2015.
*n = number of children offered consultations (not withdrawn or deceased)
†Standard errors adjusted for clustering within schools
SE, standard error.
Effect of the LTK intervention on incidence of absenteeism of schoolchildren throughout the study period
| Primary outcomes | Control (n*=29) | Intervention (n*=29) | Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||||
| n† | % Absent | n† | % Absent | OR‡ (95% CI) | P value | OR‡ (95% CI) | P value | |
| Daily attendance | 4430 | 20.86 | 4587 | 19.31 | 0.90 (0.77 to 1.05) | 0.173 | 0.91 (0.78 to 1.06) | 0.224 |
| Spot checks | 2867 | 22.22 | 2924 | 24.00 | 1.09 (0.87 to 1.36) | 0.474 | 1.10 (0.88 to 1.39) | 0.390 |
As measured by daily registers and periodic spot checks. Results presented (1) For all children with outcome data (unadjusted). (2) Once adjusted for age, sex and stratification effects as the primary prespecified analyses.
Unadjusted All children with outcome measures, not adjusted for any demographic or study design characteristics.
Adjusted for age, sex, school size and school programmes considered in stratification and for school flooding in January 2015
*Number of schools
†Number of children eligible for follow up (not withdrawn or deceased)
‡Standard errors adjusted for clustering within schools
LTK, Learner Treatment Kits.
Effect of the Learner Treatment Kit (LTK) intervention on child-reported well-being during June–July 2014 for study children
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| Child-reported well-being‡ | ||||||||
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| 11 368 | 72.16 | 11 731 | 75.33 | 0.86 (0.56 to 1.30)§ | 0.471 | 0.85 (0.57 to 1.25)§ | 0.398 |
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| 3109 | 19.73 | 2634 | 16.91 | ||||
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| 1277 | 8.11 | 1207 | 7.75 | ||||
Unadjusted All children with outcome measures, not adjusted for any demographic or study design characteristics.
Adjusted for age, sex, school size and school programmes considered in stratification and for school flooding in January 2015.
*Number of schools
†Standard errors adjusted for clustering within schools.
‡There are up to 33 repeated measurements per child; one control cluster has no observations.
§Proportional OR.
Effect of the LTK intervention at 16 months follow-up on health and educational outcomes for study children as well as parent-reported absenteeism due to illness
| Secondary outcomes | Control (n=29)* | Intervention (n=29)* | Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||||
| n† | % | n† | % | OR‡ (95% CI) | P value | OR‡ (95% CI) | P value | |
| Anaemia | 1735 | 16.48 | 1776 | 17.57 | 1.07 (0.82 to 1.39) | 0.613 | 1.06 (0.81 to 1.38) | 0.670 |
| Infection with | 1732 | 16.40 | 1772 | 15.52 | 1.01 (0.65 to 1.57) | 0.948 | 1.02 (0.71 to 1.47) | 0.899 |
Unadjusted All children with outcome measures, not adjusted for any demographic or study design characteristics.
Adjusted for age, sex, school size and school programmes considered in stratification and for school flooding in January 2015.
*Number of schools.
†Number of children eligible for follow up (not withdrawn or deceased).
‡standard errors adjusted for clustering within schools.
§Days of school lost during their children’s last bout of illness (for those who reported their child had been absent due to illness in the last 2 weeks).
LTK, Learner Treatment Kit.
Figure 3Effect on parent-reported health-seeking behaviour: 983 parents (473 in the control group (dark bars) and 510 in the intervention group (light bars)) interviewed at the follow-up survey on treatment-seeking behaviour for their children. 95% CI is denoted. LTK, Learner Treatment Kit.