Millar Kathryn R, McCutcheon Jennifer, Coakley Eugenie H, Brieger William, Ibrahim Mohammed A, Mohammed Zainab, Bassi Amos, Sambisa William
JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc,, 44 Farnsworth Street, Boston, MA 02210, USA.
Malar J. 2014 Nov 21;13:447. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-447.
Despite recent improvements in malaria prevention strategies, malaria case management remains a weakness in Northern Nigeria, which is underserved and suffers the country's highest rates of under-five child mortality. Understanding malaria care-seeking patterns and comparing case management outcomes to World Health Organization (WHO) and Nigeria's National Malaria Control Programme (NMCP) guidelines are necessary to identify where policy and programmatic strategies should focus to prevent malaria mortality and morbidity.
A cross-sectional survey based on lot quality assurance sampling was used to collect data on malaria care-seeking for children under five with fever in the last two weeks throughout Sokoto and Bauchi States. The survey assessed if the child received NMCP/WHO recommended case management: prompt treatment, a diagnostic blood test, and artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). Deviations from this pathway and location of treatment were also assessed. Lastly, logistic regression was used to assess predictors of seeking treatment.
Overall, 76.7% of children were brought to treatment-45.5% to a patent medicine vendor and 43.8% to a health facility. Of children brought to treatment, 61.5% sought treatment promptly, but only 9.8% received a diagnostic blood test and 7.2% received a prompt ACT. When assessing adherence to the complete case management pathway, only 1.0% of children received NMCP/WHO recommended treatment. When compared to other treatment locations, health facilities provided the greatest proportion of children with NMCP/WHO recommended treatment. Lastly, children 7-59 months old were at 1.74 (p = 0.003) greater odds of receiving treatment than children ≤6 months.
Northern Nigeria's coverage rates of NMCP/WHO standard malaria case management for children under five with fever fall short of the NMCP goal of 80% coverage by 2010 and universal coverage thereafter. Given the ability to treat a child with malaria differs greatly between treatment locations, policy and logistics planning should address the shortages of essential malaria supplies in recommended and frequently accessed treatment locations. Particular emphasis should be placed on integrating the private sector into standardized care and educating caregivers on the necessity for testing before treatment and the availability of free ACT in public health facilities for uncomplicated malaria.
尽管疟疾预防策略近期有所改进,但在尼日利亚北部,疟疾病例管理仍是一个薄弱环节。该地区医疗服务不足,五岁以下儿童死亡率在该国居高不下。了解疟疾就医模式,并将病例管理结果与世界卫生组织(WHO)及尼日利亚国家疟疾控制项目(NMCP)的指南进行比较,对于确定政策和项目策略应聚焦于何处以预防疟疾死亡和发病至关重要。
采用基于批质量保证抽样的横断面调查,收集索科托州和包奇州五岁以下两周内发烧儿童的疟疾就医数据。该调查评估儿童是否接受了NMCP/WHO推荐的病例管理:及时治疗、诊断性血液检测以及以青蒿素为基础的联合疗法(ACT)。同时也评估了偏离该路径的情况以及治疗地点。最后,使用逻辑回归分析来评估寻求治疗的预测因素。
总体而言,76.7%的儿童被带去接受治疗,其中45.5%被带到成药小贩处,43.8%被带到医疗机构。在带去接受治疗的儿童中,61.5%得到了及时治疗,但只有9.8%接受了诊断性血液检测,7.2%接受了及时的ACT治疗。在评估对完整病例管理路径的依从性时,只有1.0%的儿童接受了NMCP/WHO推荐的治疗。与其他治疗地点相比,医疗机构为儿童提供NMCP/WHO推荐治疗的比例最高。最后,7至59个月大的儿童接受治疗的几率比6个月及以下的儿童高1.74倍(p = 0.003)。
尼日利亚北部五岁以下发烧儿童的NMCP/WHO标准疟疾病例管理覆盖率未达到NMCP到2010年80%覆盖率及此后普及覆盖率的目标。鉴于不同治疗地点治疗疟疾患儿的能力差异很大,政策和后勤规划应解决推荐的及经常就诊的治疗地点基本疟疾用品短缺的问题。应特别强调将私营部门纳入标准化护理,并向护理人员宣传治疗前检测的必要性以及公共卫生机构为单纯性疟疾提供免费ACT的情况。