Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Medical Emergency Relief International, Nimule, South Sudan.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Mar 20;8(3):e2742. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002742. eCollection 2014 Mar.
Active screening by mobile teams is considered the most effective method for detecting gambiense-type human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) but constrained funding in many post-conflict countries limits this approach. Non-specialist health care workers (HCWs) in peripheral health facilities could be trained to identify potential cases for testing based on symptoms. We tested a training intervention for HCWs in peripheral facilities in Nimule, South Sudan to increase knowledge of HAT symptomatology and the rate of syndromic referrals to a central screening and treatment centre.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We trained 108 HCWs from 61/74 of the public, private and military peripheral health facilities in the county during six one-day workshops and assessed behaviour change using quantitative and qualitative methods. In four months prior to training, only 2/562 people passively screened for HAT were referred from a peripheral HCW (0 cases detected) compared to 13/352 (2 cases detected) in the four months after, a 6.5-fold increase in the referral rate observed by the hospital. Modest increases in absolute referrals received, however, concealed higher levels of referral activity in the periphery. HCWs in 71.4% of facilities followed-up had made referrals, incorporating new and pre-existing ideas about HAT case detection into referral practice. HCW knowledge scores of HAT symptoms improved across all demographic sub-groups. Of 71 HAT referrals made, two-thirds were from new referrers. Only 11 patients completed the referral, largely because of difficulties patients in remote areas faced accessing transportation.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The training increased knowledge and this led to more widespread appropriate HAT referrals from a low base. Many referrals were not completed, however. Increasing access to screening and/or diagnostic tests in the periphery will be needed for greater impact on case-detection in this context. These data suggest it may be possible for peripheral HCWs to target the use of rapid diagnostic tests for HAT.
移动团队的主动筛查被认为是发现冈比亚型人体非洲锥虫病(HAT)的最有效方法,但在许多冲突后国家,受限的资金限制了这种方法。可以培训外围卫生设施的非专业卫生保健工作者(HCW)根据症状识别潜在病例进行检测。我们在南苏丹尼穆勒的外围设施中测试了针对 HCW 的培训干预措施,以提高对 HAT 症状学的认识,并提高基于症状向中央筛查和治疗中心转诊的比例。
方法/主要发现:我们在该县的 61/74 个公共、私人和军事外围卫生设施中培训了 108 名 HCW,在六天的一次培训中评估了行为变化,使用定量和定性方法。在培训前的四个月中,只有 2/562 人从外围 HCW 中被动筛查 HAT 被转诊(未发现病例),而在培训后的四个月中,有 13/352 人(发现 2 例),转诊率提高了 6.5 倍医院观察到的。转诊人数的绝对增加虽然掩盖了外围活动更高水平的转诊活动。在已跟进的 71.4%的设施中,HCW 进行了转诊,将新的和以前的 HAT 病例检测想法纳入转诊实践。所有人群亚组的 HAT 症状知识得分均有所提高。在 71 例 HAT 转诊中,三分之二来自新转诊者。只有 11 名患者完成了转诊,主要是因为偏远地区的患者在获得交通方面遇到困难。
结论/意义:培训提高了知识,这导致从低基数更广泛地进行适当的 HAT 转诊。然而,许多转诊并没有完成。在这方面,需要增加外围地区的筛查和/或诊断测试的机会,以更大程度地提高病例发现率。这些数据表明,外围 HCW 可能可以针对 HAT 使用快速诊断测试。