Eastern and Southern Africa Centre of International Parasite Control, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Kenya.
Division of Family Health, Ministry of Health (MOH), Nairobi, Kenya.
PLoS One. 2021 Sep 16;16(9):e0257276. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0257276. eCollection 2021.
In Kenya, health service delivery and access to health care remains a challenge for vulnerable populations, particularly pregnant women and children below five years. The aim of this study, therefore, was to determine the positivity rate of Plasmodium falciparum parasites in pregnant women and children below five years of age seeking healthcare services at the rural health facilities of Kwale and Siaya counties as well as their access and uptake of malaria control integrated services, like antenatal care (ANC), offered in those facilities.
Cluster random sampling method was used to select pregnant women and children below five years receiving maternal and child health services using two cross-sectional surveys conducted in eleven rural health facilities in two malaria endemic counties in western and coastal regions of Kenya. Each consenting participant provided single blood sample for determining malaria parasitaemia using microscopy and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques.
Using PCR technique, the overall malaria positivity rate was 27.9% (95%CI: 20.9-37.2), and was 34.1% (95%CI: 27.1-42.9) and 22.0% (95%CI: 13.3-36.3) in children below five years and pregnant women respectively. Additionally, using microscopy, the overall positivity rate was 39.0% (95%CI: 29.5-51.6), and was 50.4% (95%CI: 39.4-64.5) and 30.6% (95%CI: 22.4-41.7) in children below five years and pregnant women respectively. Siaya County in western Kenya showed higher malaria positivity rates for both children (36.4% and 54.9%) and pregnant women (27.8% and 38.5%) using both PCR and microscopy diagnosis techniques respectively, compared to Kwale County that showed positivity rates of 27.2% and 37.9% for children and 5.2% and 8.6% for pregnant women similarly using both PCR and microscopy techniques respectively. Pregnant women presenting themselves for their first ANC visit were up to five times at risk of malaria infection, (adjusted odds ratio = 5.40, 95%CI: 0.96-30.50, p = 0.046).
Despite evidence of ANC attendance and administration of intermittent preventive treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) dosage during these visits, malaria positivity rate was still high among pregnant women and children below five years in these two rural counties. These findings are important to the Kenyan National Malaria Control Programme and will help contribute to improvement of policies on integration of malaria control approaches in rural health facilities.
在肯尼亚,卫生服务的提供和医疗保健的获取仍然是弱势群体,尤其是孕妇和五岁以下儿童面临的挑战。因此,本研究旨在确定在夸莱县和锡亚县的农村卫生机构寻求医疗服务的孕妇和五岁以下儿童中恶性疟原虫寄生虫的阳性率,以及他们对在这些机构提供的疟疾综合控制服务(如产前护理(ANC))的获得和接受情况。
采用整群随机抽样方法,在肯尼亚西部和沿海地区两个疟疾流行县的 11 个农村卫生机构中,对接受母婴保健服务的孕妇和五岁以下儿童进行了两项横断面调查。每位同意的参与者都提供了一份单一的血液样本,用于通过显微镜检查和聚合酶链反应(PCR)技术来确定疟疾寄生虫血症。
使用 PCR 技术,总体疟疾阳性率为 27.9%(95%CI:20.9-37.2),五岁以下儿童和孕妇分别为 34.1%(95%CI:27.1-42.9)和 22.0%(95%CI:13.3-36.3)。此外,使用显微镜检查,总体阳性率为 39.0%(95%CI:29.5-51.6),五岁以下儿童和孕妇分别为 50.4%(95%CI:39.4-64.5)和 30.6%(95%CI:22.4-41.7)。西肯尼亚的锡亚县,无论是使用 PCR 还是显微镜诊断技术,五岁以下儿童(分别为 36.4%和 54.9%)和孕妇(分别为 27.8%和 38.5%)的疟疾阳性率均较高,而夸莱县则分别使用 PCR 和显微镜技术,五岁以下儿童的阳性率为 27.2%和 37.9%,孕妇的阳性率为 5.2%和 8.6%。首次接受 ANC 就诊的孕妇感染疟疾的风险高达五倍,(调整后的优势比=5.40,95%CI:0.96-30.50,p=0.046)。
尽管在这些就诊期间有 ANC 就诊和间歇性预防治疗(磺胺多辛-乙胺嘧啶(IPTp-SP)剂量)的证据,但在这两个农村县,孕妇和五岁以下儿童的疟疾阳性率仍然很高。这些发现对肯尼亚国家疟疾控制规划很重要,并将有助于改进农村卫生机构中疟疾控制方法的整合政策。