Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi

Abstract Background Prompt and effective malaria treatment are key in reducing transmission, disease severity and mortality. With the current scale-up of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) coverage, there is need to focus on challenges affecting implementation of the intervention. Routine i...

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Main Authors: Alinune N. Kabaghe, Mphatso D. Phiri, Kamija S. Phiri, Michèle van Vugt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-10-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2066-7
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spelling doaj-72e023705af54462a00db1a9e1b7d85d2020-11-25T00:55:51ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752017-10-0116111010.1186/s12936-017-2066-7Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural MalawiAlinune N. Kabaghe0Mphatso D. Phiri1Kamija S. Phiri2Michèle van Vugt3Center of Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, Division of Internal Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of AmsterdamMinistry of Health, Queen Elizabeth Central HospitalPublic Health Department, College of MedicineCenter of Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, Division of Internal Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of AmsterdamAbstract Background Prompt and effective malaria treatment are key in reducing transmission, disease severity and mortality. With the current scale-up of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) coverage, there is need to focus on challenges affecting implementation of the intervention. Routine indicators focus on utilization and coverage, neglecting implementation quality. A health system in rural Malawi was assessed for uncomplicated malaria treatment implementation in children. Methods A cross-sectional health facility survey was conducted in six health centres around the Majete Wildlife Reserve in Chikwawa district using a health system effectiveness approach to assess uncomplicated malaria treatment implementation. Interviews with health facility personnel and exit interviews with guardians of 120 children under 5 years were conducted. Results Health workers appropriately prescribed an ACT and did not prescribe an ACT to 73% (95% CI 63–84%) of malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) positive and 98% (95% CI 96–100%) RDT negative children, respectively. However, 24% (95% CI 13–37%) of children receiving artemisinin–lumefantrine had an inappropriate dose by weight. Health facility findings included inadequate number of personnel (average: 2.1 health workers per 10,000 population), anti-malarial drug stock-outs or not supplied, and inconsistent health information records. Guardians of 59% (95% CI 51–69%) of children presented within 24 h of onset of child’s symptoms. Conclusion The survey presents an approach for assessing treatment effectiveness, highlighting bottlenecks which coverage indicators are incapable of detecting, and which may reduce quality and effectiveness of malaria treatment. Health service provider practices in prescribing and dosing anti-malarial drugs, due to drug stock-outs or high patient load, risk development of drug resistance, treatment failure and exposure to adverse effects.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2066-7MalariaHealth systemsClinical decision makingCare-seeking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alinune N. Kabaghe
Mphatso D. Phiri
Kamija S. Phiri
Michèle van Vugt
spellingShingle Alinune N. Kabaghe
Mphatso D. Phiri
Kamija S. Phiri
Michèle van Vugt
Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
Malaria Journal
Malaria
Health systems
Clinical decision making
Care-seeking
author_facet Alinune N. Kabaghe
Mphatso D. Phiri
Kamija S. Phiri
Michèle van Vugt
author_sort Alinune N. Kabaghe
title Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
title_short Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
title_full Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
title_fullStr Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural Malawi
title_sort challenges in implementing uncomplicated malaria treatment in children: a health facility survey in rural malawi
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Abstract Background Prompt and effective malaria treatment are key in reducing transmission, disease severity and mortality. With the current scale-up of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) coverage, there is need to focus on challenges affecting implementation of the intervention. Routine indicators focus on utilization and coverage, neglecting implementation quality. A health system in rural Malawi was assessed for uncomplicated malaria treatment implementation in children. Methods A cross-sectional health facility survey was conducted in six health centres around the Majete Wildlife Reserve in Chikwawa district using a health system effectiveness approach to assess uncomplicated malaria treatment implementation. Interviews with health facility personnel and exit interviews with guardians of 120 children under 5 years were conducted. Results Health workers appropriately prescribed an ACT and did not prescribe an ACT to 73% (95% CI 63–84%) of malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) positive and 98% (95% CI 96–100%) RDT negative children, respectively. However, 24% (95% CI 13–37%) of children receiving artemisinin–lumefantrine had an inappropriate dose by weight. Health facility findings included inadequate number of personnel (average: 2.1 health workers per 10,000 population), anti-malarial drug stock-outs or not supplied, and inconsistent health information records. Guardians of 59% (95% CI 51–69%) of children presented within 24 h of onset of child’s symptoms. Conclusion The survey presents an approach for assessing treatment effectiveness, highlighting bottlenecks which coverage indicators are incapable of detecting, and which may reduce quality and effectiveness of malaria treatment. Health service provider practices in prescribing and dosing anti-malarial drugs, due to drug stock-outs or high patient load, risk development of drug resistance, treatment failure and exposure to adverse effects.
topic Malaria
Health systems
Clinical decision making
Care-seeking
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2066-7
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