BackgroundCase-management with artemether-lumefantrine (AL) is one of the key strategies to control malaria in many African countries. Yet, the reports on translation of AL implementation activities into clinical practice are scarce. Here the quality of AL case-management is reported from Uganda; approximately one year after AL replaced combination of chloroquine and sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (CQ+SP) as recommended first line treatment for uncomplicated malaria.MethodsA cross-sectional survey, using a range of quality of care assessment tools, was undertaken at all government and private-not-for-profit facilities in four Ugandan districts. Main outcome measures were AL prescribing, dispensing and counseling practices in comparison with national guidelines, and factors influencing health workers decision to 1) treat for malaria, and 2) prescribe AL.Results195 facilities, 232 health workers and 1,763 outpatient consultations were evaluated. Of 1,200 patients who needed treatment with AL according to guidelines, AL was prescribed for 60%, CQ+SP for 14%, quinine for 4%, CQ for 3%, other antimalarials for 3%, and 16% of patients had no antimalarial drug prescribed. AL was prescribed in the correct dose for 95% of patients. Only three out of seven AL counseling and dispensing tasks were performed for more than 50% of patients. Patients were more likely to be treated for malaria if they presented with main complaint of fever (OR = 5.22; 95% CI: 3.61–7.54) and if they were seen by supervised health workers (OR = 1.63; 95% CI: 1.06–2.50); however less likely if they were treated by more qualified health workers (OR = 0.61; 95% CI: 0.40–0.93) and presented with skin problem (OR = 0.29; 95% CI: 0.15–0.55). AL was more likely prescribed if the appropriate weight-specific AL pack was in stock (OR = 6.15; 95% CI: 3.43–11.05) and when CQ was absent (OR = 2.16; 95% CI: 1.09–4.28). Routine AL implementation activities were not associated with better performance.ConclusionAlthough the use of AL was predominant over non-recommended therapies, the quality of AL case-management at the point of care is not yet optimal. There is an urgent need for innovative quality improvement interventions, which should be rigorously tested. Adequate availability of ACTs at the point of care will, however, ultimately determine the success of any performance interventions and ACT policy transitions.
Malaria case-management under artemether-lumefantrine treatment policy in Uganda
D. Zurovac,James K. Tibenderana,Joan Nankabirwa,James Ssekitooleko,J. Njogu,J. Rwakimari,S. Meek,A. Talisuna,R. Snow
Published 2008 in Malaria Journal
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2008
- Venue
Malaria Journal
- Publication date
2008-09-19
- Fields of study
Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- al case-management
The prescribing, dispensing, and counseling practices for artemether-lumefantrine at point of care.
Aliases: AL management
- al counseling and dispensing tasks
The set of counseling and dispensing steps assessed for patients receiving artemether-lumefantrine.
- artemether-lumefantrine
A fixed-dose artemisinin-based combination therapy used as first-line malaria treatment in the Ugandan setting described here.
Aliases: AL
- chloroquine
A non-recommended antimalarial treatment still compared with artemether-lumefantrine in the survey.
Aliases: CQ
- fever
A presenting complaint considered when modeling whether a patient was treated for malaria.
- health worker qualification
The level of formal qualification of the clinician seen by the patient.
Aliases: more qualified health workers
- malaria treatment decision
The decision to treat a patient for malaria at the outpatient visit.
Aliases: treat for malaria
- national guidelines
The recommended malaria treatment guidance used to judge whether patient management matched official standards.
Aliases: Ugandan guidelines
- routine al implementation activities
Standard activities used during rollout of the artemether-lumefantrine policy, such as routine implementation support.
Aliases: routine implementation activities
- skin problem
A presenting complaint used as a predictor of malaria treatment decisions.
- supervised health workers
Health workers whose practice was supervised, used here as a provider characteristic in the analysis.
- weight-specific al pack
A pack of artemether-lumefantrine matched to a patient's weight band.
Aliases: appropriate weight-specific AL pack
REFERENCES
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