| Literature DB >> 33150127 |
Jessica Abrams1, David A Watkins2, Leila H Abdullahi1, Liesl J Zühlke1,3,4, Mark E Engel5.
Abstract
Background: National and international political commitments have been made recently on rheumatic heart disease (RHD), a preventable heart condition that is endemic in low-resource countries. To inform best practice and identify evidence gaps, we assessed the effectiveness of RHD prevention and control programmes and the extent and nature of their integration into local health systems.Entities:
Keywords: integration; rheumatic fever; rheumatic heart disease
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33150127 PMCID: PMC7500229 DOI: 10.5334/gh.874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Heart ISSN: 2211-8160
Figure 1Study selection.
Characteristics of included studies (ordered chronologically).
| Study ID | Country and region | Programme duration | Description of the intervention | Study outcome(s) measured | Level(s) of prevention or care | Programme scale: numbers of healthcare workers and patients involved | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1° | 2° | 3° | ||||||
| Iyengar 1991 [ | India: Haryana State, Ambala district. | 2 years | An ARF/RHD health education and training programme for health workers, teachers, and school pupils, as well as the registration of new cases and prescription of penicillin. | I. The number and source of: suspected case referrals, registered cases, and confirmed cases of RF and RHD (case detection rate) | ✓ | 202 healthcare workers and 773 teachers were trained to recognise the signs and symptoms of ARF and RHD. Of the 254 suspected case referrals, 77 were registered in health centres, of which 61 were confirmed and began secondary prophylaxis. | ||
| WHO 1992 [ | 16 countries participated: (Africa) Mali, Zambia, Zimbabwe; (Americas) Bolivia, El Salvador, Jamaica; (Eastern Mediterranean) Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan and Sudan; (South-East Asia) India, Sri Lanka and Thailand; (Western pacific) China, the Philippines, and Tonga. | 4 years | Personnel training, health education and a central ARF/RHD register. | I. Secondary prophylaxis coverage. | ✓ | Across all of the countries, 24 398 personnel trained; 33 651 patients were registered. | ||
| Nordet 2008 [ | Cuba: Pinar del Rio. | 10 years | A community based prevention and treatment of ARF/RHD through healthcare education and training of health personnel as well as the establishment of dedicated register centres. | I. The incidence of ARF (new and recurrent cases). | ✓ | ✓ | All 5–25 year old permanent residents of the province during the study period were included (n = 273 933). | |
| Ralph 2013 [ | Australia: Northern Territory. | 3 years | A continuous quality improvement (CQI) strategy to improve the documentation and care of ARF/RHD patients. | I. Proportion of patients receiving scheduled BPG. | ✓ | 6 health centres participated; 154 ARF/RHD patients. | ||
| Kwan 2013 [ | Rwanda: Kirehe and Southern Kayonza districts. | 4.4 years | Outpatient heart failure services implemented at pre-existing integrated NCD clinics at two rural hospitals. Portable ECG and algorithms were used for the diagnosis and management of patients with suspected heart failure. | I. Distribution of conditions (including RHD) among heart failure patients. | ✓ | Each clinic team included 2 nurses and 2 administrative personnel, supervised by generalist physicians. Out of 237 patients suspected of heart failure, 192 had a confirmed cardiologist diagnosis and were enrolled in the heart failure programme. | ||
ARF, acute rheumatic fever; RHD, rheumatic heart disease.
Figure 2The extent and nature of integration by level of prevention for rheumatic heart disease programmes in various countries.
Programme performance.
| Country (Study ID) | Outputs | Outcomes | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| ▪ Increased medical awareness among young patients. | ▪ Timely diagnosis and treatment of strep-throats. | ▪ The incidence of first ARF attacks declined from 12.2 per 100 000 in 1986 to 2.1 per 100 000 in 1996. | |
| ▪ The number of clinical records audited each year were 154 in 2008, 145 in 2009, and 156 in 2010. | ▪ The proportion of patients receiving ≥40% of scheduled BPG increased from 81/116 (70%) at baseline to 84/103 (82%) in year three, p = 0.04. ▪ The proportion of people receiving ≥80% of scheduled BPG did not improve, remaining around 25% across all six health centres over the study duration. ▪ More patients were reviewed by their doctor within the past two years: from, 112/154 (73%) to 134/156 (86%), p = 0.003. ▪ Improved details on patients with ARF/RHD: ARF episode documentation increased from 31/55 (56%) to 50/62 (81%) (p = 0.004), and RHD risk category documentation from 87/154 (56%) to 103/145 (76%) (p < 0.001). ▪ Patients within the recommended INR range increased from 64% to 75%. | ▪ | |
| ▪ 327 patients registered over the study period. | ▪ Increased regular secondary prophylaxis compliance of registered patents (from 50% in 1986 to 93.8% in 1996). | ▪ Decline in the prevalence of ARF and RHD (8.0 to 2.0 cases per 1 000 school children). | |
| ▪ A total of 254 suspected cases of ARF or RHD referred by teachers, health workers, and medical officers. | ▪ 3.5 time increases in the case detection rate in the intervention block (7.8/100 000/year to 27.5/100 000/year). | ▪ | |
| ▪ The diagnosis and registration of 77 new cases of ARF/RHD (of which 61 were subsequently confirmed to have the disease). | |||
| ▪ 33 651 total patients identified and registered. | ▪ The rate of average prophylaxis coverage was 70%. | ▪ | |
| ▪ 192 patients were confirmed to have heart failure and were enrolled at the clinic. Of this cohort, 61 patients (32%) had RHD (26 patients were below the age of 18 years and 35 patients were adults). | ▪ The observed retention in the programme was 62%. Fifty-five patients (29%) were lost to follow-up. | ▪ | |
Figure 3AThe effect of partially integrated ARF/RHD programmes on ARF/RHD-related outcomes.
Figure 3BThe effect of an integrated programme on ARF secondary prophylaxis compliance.