Winch Peter J, Gilroy Kate E, Doumbia Seydou, Patterson Amy E, Daou Zana, Diawara Adama, Swedberg Eric, Black Robert E, Fontaine Olivier
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205-2103, USA.
J Health Popul Nutr. 2008 Jun;26(2):151-62.
Zinc for the treatment of childhood diarrhoea was introduced in a pilot area in southern Mali to prepare for a cluster-randomized effectiveness study and to inform policies on how to best introduce and promote zinc at the community level. Dispersible zinc tablets in 14-tablet blister packs were provided through community health centres and drug kits managed by community health workers (CHWs) in two health zones in Bougouni district, Mali. Village meetings and individual counselling provided by CHWs and head nurses at health centres were the principal channels of communication. A combination of methods were employed to (a) detect problems in communication about the benefits of zinc and its mode of administration; (b) identify and resolve obstacles to implementation of zinc through existing health services; and (c) describe household-level constraints to the adoption of appropriate home-management practices for diarrhoea, including administration of both zinc and oral rehydration solution (ORS). Population-based household surveys with caretakers of children sick in the previous two weeks were carried out before and four months after the introduction of zinc supplementation. Household follow-up visits with children receiving zinc from the health centres and CHWs were conducted on day 3 and 14 after treatment for a subsample of children. A qualitative process evaluation also was conducted to investigate operational issues. Preliminary evidence from this study suggests that the introduction of zinc does not reduce the use of ORS and may reduce inappropriate antibiotic use for childhood diarrhoea. Financial access to treatments, management of concurrent diarrhoea and fever, and high use of unauthorized drug vendors were identified as factors affecting the effectiveness of the intervention in this setting. The introduction of zinc, if not appropriately integrated with other disease-control strategies, has the potential to decrease the appropriate presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in children with diarrhoea and fever in malaria-endemic areas.
在马里南部的一个试点地区引入了锌剂治疗儿童腹泻,为整群随机有效性研究做准备,并为如何在社区层面最佳引入和推广锌剂提供政策依据。通过马里布古尼区两个卫生区的社区卫生中心和由社区卫生工作者(CHW)管理的药盒,提供了装在14片泡罩包装中的可分散片剂锌。社区卫生工作者和卫生中心的护士长组织的村民会议及个别咨询是主要的沟通渠道。采用了多种方法来:(a)发现锌剂益处及服用方式方面的沟通问题;(b)识别并解决通过现有卫生服务实施锌剂治疗的障碍;(c)描述家庭层面在采用腹泻适当家庭管理措施(包括服用锌剂和口服补液盐(ORS))方面的限制因素。在引入锌剂补充前后以及四个月后,对前两周生病儿童的看护人进行了基于人群的家庭调查。对一部分接受卫生中心和社区卫生工作者提供锌剂治疗的儿童,在治疗后第3天和第14天进行了家庭随访。还进行了定性过程评估以调查操作问题。这项研究的初步证据表明,引入锌剂不会减少口服补液盐的使用,并且可能减少儿童腹泻时不适当的抗生素使用。获得治疗的经济途径、同时存在的腹泻和发热的管理以及未经授权的药品供应商的大量使用被确定为影响该环境中干预措施有效性的因素。如果锌剂的引入没有与其他疾病控制策略适当整合,有可能减少疟疾流行地区腹泻和发热儿童中儿童疟疾的适当推定治疗。