The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria

Abstract Background Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are becoming widely adopted for case management at community level. However, reports and anecdotal observations indicate that the blood transfer step poses a significant challenge to many users. This study sought to evaluate the inverted cup...

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Main Authors: Sandra Incardona, Magoma Mwancha-Kwasa, Roxanne R. Rees-Channer, Audrey Albertini, Joshua Havumaki, Peter Chiodini, Wellington Oyibo, Iveth J. Gonzalez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2173-0
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spelling doaj-ce4f3ad8e06c46a7ac4a36234e3cfb722020-11-25T01:48:32ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752018-01-011711810.1186/s12936-018-2173-0The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in NigeriaSandra Incardona0Magoma Mwancha-Kwasa1Roxanne R. Rees-Channer2Audrey Albertini3Joshua Havumaki4Peter Chiodini5Wellington Oyibo6Iveth J. Gonzalez7Foundation for Innovative New DiagnosticsFoundation for Innovative New DiagnosticsHospital for Tropical DiseasesFoundation for Innovative New DiagnosticsFoundation for Innovative New DiagnosticsHospital for Tropical DiseasesTropical Disease Research Laboratory, Department of Medical Microbiology and Parasitology, College of Medicine, University of LagosFoundation for Innovative New DiagnosticsAbstract Background Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are becoming widely adopted for case management at community level. However, reports and anecdotal observations indicate that the blood transfer step poses a significant challenge to many users. This study sought to evaluate the inverted cup device in the hands of health workers in everyday clinical practice, in comparison with the plastic pipette, and to determine the volume accuracy of the device made of a lower-cost plastic. Methods The volume accuracy of inverted cup devices made of two plastics, PMMA and SBC, was compared by transferring blood 150 times onto filter paper and comparing the blood spot areas with those produced by 20 reference transfers with a calibrated micropipette. The ease of use, safety and acceptability of the inverted cup device and the pipette were evaluated by 50 health workers in Nigeria. Observations were recorded on pre-designed questionnaires, by the health workers themselves and by trained observers. Focus group discussions were also conducted. Results The volume accuracy assessment showed that the device made from the low-cost material (SBC) delivered a more accurate volume (mean 5.4 μL, SD 0.48 μL, range 4.5–7.0 μL) than the PMMA device (mean 5.9 μL, SD 0.48 μL, range 4.9–7.2 μL). The observational evaluation demonstrated that the inverted cup device performed better than the pipette in all aspects, e.g. higher proportions of health workers achieved successful blood collection (96%, vs. 66%), transfer of the required blood volume (90%, vs. 58%), and blood deposit without any loss (95%, vs. 50%). Majority of health workers also considered it’ very easy’ to use (81%),’very appropriate’ for everyday use (78%), and 50% of them reported that it was their preferred BTD. Conclusions The good volume accuracy and high acceptability of the inverted cup device shown in this study, along with observed ease of use and safety in hands of health workers, further strengthens prior findings which demonstrated its higher accuracy as compared with other BTDs in a laboratory setting. Altogether, these studies suggest that the inverted cup device should replace other types of devices for use in day-to-day malaria diagnosis with RDTs.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2173-0Malaria rapid diagnostic testInverted cup blood transfer deviceEase of useSafety and acceptability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra Incardona
Magoma Mwancha-Kwasa
Roxanne R. Rees-Channer
Audrey Albertini
Joshua Havumaki
Peter Chiodini
Wellington Oyibo
Iveth J. Gonzalez
spellingShingle Sandra Incardona
Magoma Mwancha-Kwasa
Roxanne R. Rees-Channer
Audrey Albertini
Joshua Havumaki
Peter Chiodini
Wellington Oyibo
Iveth J. Gonzalez
The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
Malaria Journal
Malaria rapid diagnostic test
Inverted cup blood transfer device
Ease of use
Safety and acceptability
author_facet Sandra Incardona
Magoma Mwancha-Kwasa
Roxanne R. Rees-Channer
Audrey Albertini
Joshua Havumaki
Peter Chiodini
Wellington Oyibo
Iveth J. Gonzalez
author_sort Sandra Incardona
title The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
title_short The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
title_full The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
title_fullStr The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed The inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria RDTs: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in Nigeria
title_sort inverted cup device for blood transfer on malaria rdts: ease of use, acceptability and safety in routine use by health workers in nigeria
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are becoming widely adopted for case management at community level. However, reports and anecdotal observations indicate that the blood transfer step poses a significant challenge to many users. This study sought to evaluate the inverted cup device in the hands of health workers in everyday clinical practice, in comparison with the plastic pipette, and to determine the volume accuracy of the device made of a lower-cost plastic. Methods The volume accuracy of inverted cup devices made of two plastics, PMMA and SBC, was compared by transferring blood 150 times onto filter paper and comparing the blood spot areas with those produced by 20 reference transfers with a calibrated micropipette. The ease of use, safety and acceptability of the inverted cup device and the pipette were evaluated by 50 health workers in Nigeria. Observations were recorded on pre-designed questionnaires, by the health workers themselves and by trained observers. Focus group discussions were also conducted. Results The volume accuracy assessment showed that the device made from the low-cost material (SBC) delivered a more accurate volume (mean 5.4 μL, SD 0.48 μL, range 4.5–7.0 μL) than the PMMA device (mean 5.9 μL, SD 0.48 μL, range 4.9–7.2 μL). The observational evaluation demonstrated that the inverted cup device performed better than the pipette in all aspects, e.g. higher proportions of health workers achieved successful blood collection (96%, vs. 66%), transfer of the required blood volume (90%, vs. 58%), and blood deposit without any loss (95%, vs. 50%). Majority of health workers also considered it’ very easy’ to use (81%),’very appropriate’ for everyday use (78%), and 50% of them reported that it was their preferred BTD. Conclusions The good volume accuracy and high acceptability of the inverted cup device shown in this study, along with observed ease of use and safety in hands of health workers, further strengthens prior findings which demonstrated its higher accuracy as compared with other BTDs in a laboratory setting. Altogether, these studies suggest that the inverted cup device should replace other types of devices for use in day-to-day malaria diagnosis with RDTs.
topic Malaria rapid diagnostic test
Inverted cup blood transfer device
Ease of use
Safety and acceptability
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-018-2173-0
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