GlobalHealth@UNSW and School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2013 May 15;11:16. doi: 10.1186/1478-4505-11-16.
In 2007 Timor-Leste, a malaria endemic country, changed its Malaria Treatment Protocol for uncomplicated falciparum malaria from sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine to artemether-lumefantrine. The change in treatment policy was based on the rise in morbidity due to malaria and perception of increasing drug resistance. Despite a lack of nationally available evidence on drug resistance, the Ministry of Health decided to change the protocol. The policy process leading to this change was examined through a qualitative study on how the country developed its revised treatment protocol for malaria. This process involved many actors and was led by the Timor-Leste Ministry of Health and the WHO country office. This paper examines the challenges and opportunities identified during this period of treatment protocol change.
2007 年,东帝汶这个疟疾流行的国家将其治疗无并发症恶性疟原虫疟疾的《抗疟治疗方案》从磺胺多辛-乙胺嘧啶改为青蒿琥酯-阿莫地喹。治疗政策的改变是基于疟疾发病率的上升和对药物耐药性不断增加的认识。尽管缺乏全国性的耐药性证据,但卫生部决定改变方案。通过对该国制定修订后的疟疾治疗方案的过程进行定性研究,审查了导致这一变化的政策过程。这一过程涉及许多行为者,由东帝汶卫生部和世卫组织国家办事处牵头。本文审查了在这一治疗方案改变期间确定的挑战和机遇。