Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination

Abstract Background In India, Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) deliver services for diagnosis and treatment of malaria, although unlicensed medical practitioners (UMPs) (informal health providers) are most preferred in communities. A cross sectional survey was conducted to: (i) assess know...

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Main Authors: Mrigendra Pal Singh, Sunil Kumar Chand, Kalyan Brata Saha, Neetiraj Singh, Ramesh C. Dhiman, Lora L. Sabin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-020-3109-z
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spelling doaj-2799d9bcf63c43ca9c6538fbf7e48c482021-01-17T12:55:40ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752020-01-0119111010.1186/s12936-020-3109-zUnlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria eliminationMrigendra Pal Singh0Sunil Kumar Chand1Kalyan Brata Saha2Neetiraj Singh3Ramesh C. Dhiman4Lora L. Sabin5ICMR-National Institute of Malaria Research Field Unit JabalpurICMR-National Institute of Malaria Research Field Unit JabalpurICMR-National Institute of Research in Tribal HealthTribal Development and Research Institute, Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Government of Madhya PradeshICMR-National Institute of Malaria ResearchDepartment of Global Health, Boston University School of Public HealthAbstract Background In India, Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) deliver services for diagnosis and treatment of malaria, although unlicensed medical practitioners (UMPs) (informal health providers) are most preferred in communities. A cross sectional survey was conducted to: (i) assess knowledge and treatment-seeking practices in the community, and (ii) explore the diagnosis and treatment practices related to malaria of UMPs working in rural and tribal-dominated high malaria endemic areas of central India, and whether they adhere to the national guidelines. Methods A multi-stage sampling method and survey technique was adopted. Heads of the households and UMPs were interviewed using a structured interview schedule to assess knowledge and malaria treatment practices. Results Knowledge regarding malaria symptoms was generally accurate, but misconceptions emerged related to malaria transmission and mosquito breeding places. Modern preventive measures were poorly accessed by the households. UMPs were the most preferred health providers (49%) and the first choice in households for seeking treatment. UMPs typically lacked knowledge of the names of malaria parasite species and species-specific diagnosis and treatment. Further, irrational use of anti-malarial drugs was common. Conclusions UMPs were the most preferred type of health care providers in rural communities where health infrastructure is poor. The study suggests enhancing training of UMPs on national guidelines for malaria diagnosis and treatment to strengthen their ability to contribute to achievement of India’s malaria elimination goals.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-020-3109-zIrrational use of antimalarial drugsMonotherapy of artemisininPlasmodium falciparumTribal malariaUnlicensed medical practitioner
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mrigendra Pal Singh
Sunil Kumar Chand
Kalyan Brata Saha
Neetiraj Singh
Ramesh C. Dhiman
Lora L. Sabin
spellingShingle Mrigendra Pal Singh
Sunil Kumar Chand
Kalyan Brata Saha
Neetiraj Singh
Ramesh C. Dhiman
Lora L. Sabin
Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
Malaria Journal
Irrational use of antimalarial drugs
Monotherapy of artemisinin
Plasmodium falciparum
Tribal malaria
Unlicensed medical practitioner
author_facet Mrigendra Pal Singh
Sunil Kumar Chand
Kalyan Brata Saha
Neetiraj Singh
Ramesh C. Dhiman
Lora L. Sabin
author_sort Mrigendra Pal Singh
title Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
title_short Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
title_full Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
title_fullStr Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
title_full_unstemmed Unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central India: bottleneck in malaria elimination
title_sort unlicensed medical practitioners in tribal dominated rural areas of central india: bottleneck in malaria elimination
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background In India, Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) deliver services for diagnosis and treatment of malaria, although unlicensed medical practitioners (UMPs) (informal health providers) are most preferred in communities. A cross sectional survey was conducted to: (i) assess knowledge and treatment-seeking practices in the community, and (ii) explore the diagnosis and treatment practices related to malaria of UMPs working in rural and tribal-dominated high malaria endemic areas of central India, and whether they adhere to the national guidelines. Methods A multi-stage sampling method and survey technique was adopted. Heads of the households and UMPs were interviewed using a structured interview schedule to assess knowledge and malaria treatment practices. Results Knowledge regarding malaria symptoms was generally accurate, but misconceptions emerged related to malaria transmission and mosquito breeding places. Modern preventive measures were poorly accessed by the households. UMPs were the most preferred health providers (49%) and the first choice in households for seeking treatment. UMPs typically lacked knowledge of the names of malaria parasite species and species-specific diagnosis and treatment. Further, irrational use of anti-malarial drugs was common. Conclusions UMPs were the most preferred type of health care providers in rural communities where health infrastructure is poor. The study suggests enhancing training of UMPs on national guidelines for malaria diagnosis and treatment to strengthen their ability to contribute to achievement of India’s malaria elimination goals.
topic Irrational use of antimalarial drugs
Monotherapy of artemisinin
Plasmodium falciparum
Tribal malaria
Unlicensed medical practitioner
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-020-3109-z
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