Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study

ObjectiveIntegrated community case management (iCCM) of childhood illness is a powerful intervention to reduce mortality. Yet, only 29% and 59% of children with fever in sub-Saharan Africa had access to malaria testing and treatment between 2015 and 2017. We report how iCCM+ based on incorporating a...

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Main Authors: Cavin Epie Bekolo, Thomas D’Arcy Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2019-06-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/6/e026678.full
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spelling doaj-cdc0779c09cc4fa99e57e11e540c8a292021-07-03T12:30:22ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552019-06-019610.1136/bmjopen-2018-026678Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement studyCavin Epie Bekolo0Thomas D’Arcy Williams11 Centre Medical d’Arrondissement de Bare, Nkongsamba, Cameroon 3 Community Health, Peace Corps Cameroon, Yaounde, Centre, CameroonObjectiveIntegrated community case management (iCCM) of childhood illness is a powerful intervention to reduce mortality. Yet, only 29% and 59% of children with fever in sub-Saharan Africa had access to malaria testing and treatment between 2015 and 2017. We report how iCCM+ based on incorporating active case detection of malaria into iCCM could help improve testing and treatment.DesignA community-led observational quality improvement study.SettingThe rural community of Bare-Bakem in Cameroon.ParticipantsChildren and adults with fever between April and June 2018.InterventionA modified iCCM programme (iCCM+) comprising a proactive screening of febrile children <5 years old for malaria using rapid diagnostic testing to identify index cases and a reactive screening triggered by these index cases to detect secondary cases in the community.Primary and secondary outcome measuresThe proportion of additional malaria cases detected by iCCM+ over iCCM.ResultsWe screened 501 febrile patients of whom Plasmodium infection was confirmed in 425 (84.8%) cases. Of these cases, 102 (24.0%) were index cases identified in the community during routine iCCM activity and 36 (8.5%) cases detected passively in health facilities; 38 (8.9%) were index cases identified proactively in schools and 249 (58.6%) were additional cases detected by reactive case detection—computing to a total of 287 (67.5%) additional cases found by iCCM+ over iCCM. The likelihood of finding additional cases increased with increasing family size (adjusted odd ratio (aOR)=1.2, 95% CI: 1.1 to 1.3) and with increasing age (aOR=1.7, 95% CI: 1.5 to 1.9).ConclusionMost symptomatic cases of malaria remain undetected in the community despite the introduction of CCM of malaria. iCCM+ can be adopted to diagnose and treat more of these undiagnosed cases especially when targeted to schools, older children and larger households.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/6/e026678.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cavin Epie Bekolo
Thomas D’Arcy Williams
spellingShingle Cavin Epie Bekolo
Thomas D’Arcy Williams
Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
BMJ Open
author_facet Cavin Epie Bekolo
Thomas D’Arcy Williams
author_sort Cavin Epie Bekolo
title Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
title_short Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
title_full Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
title_fullStr Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
title_full_unstemmed Adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of Cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
title_sort adding proactive and reactive case detection into the integrated community case management system to optimise diagnosis and treatment of malaria in a high transmission setting of cameroon: an observational quality improvement study
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open
issn 2044-6055
publishDate 2019-06-01
description ObjectiveIntegrated community case management (iCCM) of childhood illness is a powerful intervention to reduce mortality. Yet, only 29% and 59% of children with fever in sub-Saharan Africa had access to malaria testing and treatment between 2015 and 2017. We report how iCCM+ based on incorporating active case detection of malaria into iCCM could help improve testing and treatment.DesignA community-led observational quality improvement study.SettingThe rural community of Bare-Bakem in Cameroon.ParticipantsChildren and adults with fever between April and June 2018.InterventionA modified iCCM programme (iCCM+) comprising a proactive screening of febrile children <5 years old for malaria using rapid diagnostic testing to identify index cases and a reactive screening triggered by these index cases to detect secondary cases in the community.Primary and secondary outcome measuresThe proportion of additional malaria cases detected by iCCM+ over iCCM.ResultsWe screened 501 febrile patients of whom Plasmodium infection was confirmed in 425 (84.8%) cases. Of these cases, 102 (24.0%) were index cases identified in the community during routine iCCM activity and 36 (8.5%) cases detected passively in health facilities; 38 (8.9%) were index cases identified proactively in schools and 249 (58.6%) were additional cases detected by reactive case detection—computing to a total of 287 (67.5%) additional cases found by iCCM+ over iCCM. The likelihood of finding additional cases increased with increasing family size (adjusted odd ratio (aOR)=1.2, 95% CI: 1.1 to 1.3) and with increasing age (aOR=1.7, 95% CI: 1.5 to 1.9).ConclusionMost symptomatic cases of malaria remain undetected in the community despite the introduction of CCM of malaria. iCCM+ can be adopted to diagnose and treat more of these undiagnosed cases especially when targeted to schools, older children and larger households.
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/6/e026678.full
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