Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa

Abstract Background South Africa has set an ambitious goal targeting to eliminate malaria by 2018, which is consistent with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals’ call to end the epidemic of malaria by 2030 across the globe. There are conflicting views regarding the feasibility of malaria...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khumbulani Welcome Hlongwana, Benn Sartorius, Joyce Tsoka-Gwegweni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2154-8
id doaj-b5ab501e6d374e3287fdce6c39721341
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b5ab501e6d374e3287fdce6c397213412020-11-25T02:43:26ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752018-01-0117111310.1186/s12936-017-2154-8Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South AfricaKhumbulani Welcome Hlongwana0Benn Sartorius1Joyce Tsoka-Gwegweni2School of Nursing and Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-NatalSchool of Nursing and Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-NatalSchool of Nursing and Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-NatalAbstract Background South Africa has set an ambitious goal targeting to eliminate malaria by 2018, which is consistent with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals’ call to end the epidemic of malaria by 2030 across the globe. There are conflicting views regarding the feasibility of malaria elimination, and furthermore studies investigating malaria programme personnel’s perspectives on strategy implementation are lacking. Methods The study was a cross-sectional survey conducted in 2014 through a face-to-face investigator-administered semi-structured questionnaire to all eligible and consenting malaria programme personnel (team leader to senior manager levels) in three malaria endemic provinces (KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga, and Limpopo) of South Africa. Results The overall response rate was 88.6% (148/167) among all eligible malaria personnel. The mean age of participants was 47 years (SD 9.7, range 27–70), and the mean work experience of 19.4 years (SD 11.1, range 0–42). The majority were male (78.4%), and 66.9% had secondary level education. Awareness of the malaria elimination policy was high (99.3%), but 89% contended that they were never consulted when the policy was formulated and few had either seen (29.9%) or read (23%) the policy, either in full or in part. Having read the policy was positively associated with professional job designations (managers, EHPs and entomologists) (p = 0.010) and tertiary level education (p = 0.042). There was a sentiment that the policy was neither sufficiently disseminated to all key healthcare workers (76.4%) nor properly adapted (68.9%) for the local operational context in the elimination strategy. Most (89.1%) participants were not optimistic about eliminating malaria by 2018, as they viewed the elimination strategy in South Africa as too theoretical with unrealistic targets. Other identified barriers included inadequate resources (53.5%) and high cross-border movements (19.8%). Conclusions Most participants were not positive that South Africa could achieve the malaria elimination goal by 2018, citing the high cross-border movements and lack of resources as key barriers. The National and relevant Provincial Departments of Health should consider investing more time and resources in further stakeholder engagement for more effective implementation of malaria elimination strategy in South Africa.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2154-8MalariaEliminationEradicationImplementationHealthcare workersFacilitators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khumbulani Welcome Hlongwana
Benn Sartorius
Joyce Tsoka-Gwegweni
spellingShingle Khumbulani Welcome Hlongwana
Benn Sartorius
Joyce Tsoka-Gwegweni
Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
Malaria Journal
Malaria
Elimination
Eradication
Implementation
Healthcare workers
Facilitators
author_facet Khumbulani Welcome Hlongwana
Benn Sartorius
Joyce Tsoka-Gwegweni
author_sort Khumbulani Welcome Hlongwana
title Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
title_short Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
title_full Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
title_fullStr Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in South Africa
title_sort malaria programme personnel’s experiences, perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing malaria elimination strategy in south africa
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background South Africa has set an ambitious goal targeting to eliminate malaria by 2018, which is consistent with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals’ call to end the epidemic of malaria by 2030 across the globe. There are conflicting views regarding the feasibility of malaria elimination, and furthermore studies investigating malaria programme personnel’s perspectives on strategy implementation are lacking. Methods The study was a cross-sectional survey conducted in 2014 through a face-to-face investigator-administered semi-structured questionnaire to all eligible and consenting malaria programme personnel (team leader to senior manager levels) in three malaria endemic provinces (KwaZulu-Natal, Mpumalanga, and Limpopo) of South Africa. Results The overall response rate was 88.6% (148/167) among all eligible malaria personnel. The mean age of participants was 47 years (SD 9.7, range 27–70), and the mean work experience of 19.4 years (SD 11.1, range 0–42). The majority were male (78.4%), and 66.9% had secondary level education. Awareness of the malaria elimination policy was high (99.3%), but 89% contended that they were never consulted when the policy was formulated and few had either seen (29.9%) or read (23%) the policy, either in full or in part. Having read the policy was positively associated with professional job designations (managers, EHPs and entomologists) (p = 0.010) and tertiary level education (p = 0.042). There was a sentiment that the policy was neither sufficiently disseminated to all key healthcare workers (76.4%) nor properly adapted (68.9%) for the local operational context in the elimination strategy. Most (89.1%) participants were not optimistic about eliminating malaria by 2018, as they viewed the elimination strategy in South Africa as too theoretical with unrealistic targets. Other identified barriers included inadequate resources (53.5%) and high cross-border movements (19.8%). Conclusions Most participants were not positive that South Africa could achieve the malaria elimination goal by 2018, citing the high cross-border movements and lack of resources as key barriers. The National and relevant Provincial Departments of Health should consider investing more time and resources in further stakeholder engagement for more effective implementation of malaria elimination strategy in South Africa.
topic Malaria
Elimination
Eradication
Implementation
Healthcare workers
Facilitators
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-2154-8
work_keys_str_mv AT khumbulaniwelcomehlongwana malariaprogrammepersonnelsexperiencesperceivedbarriersandfacilitatorstoimplementingmalariaeliminationstrategyinsouthafrica
AT bennsartorius malariaprogrammepersonnelsexperiencesperceivedbarriersandfacilitatorstoimplementingmalariaeliminationstrategyinsouthafrica
AT joycetsokagwegweni malariaprogrammepersonnelsexperiencesperceivedbarriersandfacilitatorstoimplementingmalariaeliminationstrategyinsouthafrica
_version_ 1724769347416621056