Cargando…

Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda

BACKGROUND: Malaria control is currently receiving significant international commitment. As part of this commitment, Rwanda has undertaken a two-pronged approach to combating malaria via mass distribution of long-lasting insecticidal-treated nets and distribution of antimalarial medications by commu...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sievers, Amy C, Lewey, Jenifer, Musafiri, Placide, Franke, Molly F, Bucyibaruta, Blaise J, Stulac, Sara N, Rich, Michael L, Karema, Corine, Daily, Johanna P
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2557016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18752677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-167
_version_ 1782159620896194560
author Sievers, Amy C
Lewey, Jenifer
Musafiri, Placide
Franke, Molly F
Bucyibaruta, Blaise J
Stulac, Sara N
Rich, Michael L
Karema, Corine
Daily, Johanna P
author_facet Sievers, Amy C
Lewey, Jenifer
Musafiri, Placide
Franke, Molly F
Bucyibaruta, Blaise J
Stulac, Sara N
Rich, Michael L
Karema, Corine
Daily, Johanna P
author_sort Sievers, Amy C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Malaria control is currently receiving significant international commitment. As part of this commitment, Rwanda has undertaken a two-pronged approach to combating malaria via mass distribution of long-lasting insecticidal-treated nets and distribution of antimalarial medications by community health workers. This study attempted to measure the impact of these interventions on paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and on laboratory markers of disease severity. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of hospital records pre- and post-community-based malaria control interventions at a district hospital in rural Rwanda was performed. The interventions took place in August 2006 in the region served by the hospital and consisted of mass insecticide treated net distribution and community health workers antimalarial medication disbursement. The study periods consisted of the December–February high transmission seasons pre- and post-rollout. The record review examined a total of 551 paediatric admissions to identify 1) laboratory-confirmed malaria, defined by thick smear examination, 2) suspected malaria, defined as fever and symptoms consistent with malaria in the absence of an alternate cause, and 3) all-cause admissions. To define the impact of the intervention on clinical markers of malaria disease, trends in admission peripheral parasitaemia and haemoglobin were analyzed. To define accuracy of clinical diagnoses, trends in proportions of malaria admissions which were microscopy-confirmed before and after the intervention were examined. Finally, to assess overall management of febrile illnesses antibiotic use was described. RESULTS: Of the 551 total admissions, 268 (48.6%) and 437 (79.3%) were attributable to laboratory-confirmed and suspected malaria, respectively. The absolute number of admissions due to suspected malaria was smaller during the post-intervention period (N = 150) relative to the pre-intervention period (N = 287), in spite of an increase in the absolute number of hospitalizations due to other causes during the post-intervention period. The percentage of suspected malaria admissions that were laboratory-confirmed was greater during the pre-intervention period (80.4%) relative to the post-intervention period (48.1%, prevalence ratio [PR]: 1.67; 95% CI: 1.39 – 2.02; chi-squared p-value < 0.0001). Among children admitted with laboratory-confirmed malaria, the risk of high parasitaemia was higher during the pre-intervention period relative to the post-intervention period (age-adjusted PR: 1.62; 95% CI: 1.11 – 2.38; chi-squared p-value = 0.004), and the risk of severe anaemia was more than twofold greater during the pre-intervention period (age-adjusted PR: 2.47; 95% CI: 0.84 – 7.24; chi-squared p-value = 0.08). Antibiotic use was common, with 70.7% of all children with clinical malaria and 86.4% of children with slide-negative malaria receiving antibacterial therapy. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that both admissions for malaria and laboratory markers of clinical disease among children may be rapidly reduced following community-based malaria control efforts. Additionally, this study highlights the problem of over-diagnosis and over-treatment of malaria in malaria-endemic regions, especially as malaria prevalence falls. More accurate diagnosis and management of febrile illnesses is critically needed both now and as fever aetiologies change with further reductions in malaria.
format Text
id pubmed-2557016
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25570162008-10-02 Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda Sievers, Amy C Lewey, Jenifer Musafiri, Placide Franke, Molly F Bucyibaruta, Blaise J Stulac, Sara N Rich, Michael L Karema, Corine Daily, Johanna P Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Malaria control is currently receiving significant international commitment. As part of this commitment, Rwanda has undertaken a two-pronged approach to combating malaria via mass distribution of long-lasting insecticidal-treated nets and distribution of antimalarial medications by community health workers. This study attempted to measure the impact of these interventions on paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and on laboratory markers of disease severity. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of hospital records pre- and post-community-based malaria control interventions at a district hospital in rural Rwanda was performed. The interventions took place in August 2006 in the region served by the hospital and consisted of mass insecticide treated net distribution and community health workers antimalarial medication disbursement. The study periods consisted of the December–February high transmission seasons pre- and post-rollout. The record review examined a total of 551 paediatric admissions to identify 1) laboratory-confirmed malaria, defined by thick smear examination, 2) suspected malaria, defined as fever and symptoms consistent with malaria in the absence of an alternate cause, and 3) all-cause admissions. To define the impact of the intervention on clinical markers of malaria disease, trends in admission peripheral parasitaemia and haemoglobin were analyzed. To define accuracy of clinical diagnoses, trends in proportions of malaria admissions which were microscopy-confirmed before and after the intervention were examined. Finally, to assess overall management of febrile illnesses antibiotic use was described. RESULTS: Of the 551 total admissions, 268 (48.6%) and 437 (79.3%) were attributable to laboratory-confirmed and suspected malaria, respectively. The absolute number of admissions due to suspected malaria was smaller during the post-intervention period (N = 150) relative to the pre-intervention period (N = 287), in spite of an increase in the absolute number of hospitalizations due to other causes during the post-intervention period. The percentage of suspected malaria admissions that were laboratory-confirmed was greater during the pre-intervention period (80.4%) relative to the post-intervention period (48.1%, prevalence ratio [PR]: 1.67; 95% CI: 1.39 – 2.02; chi-squared p-value < 0.0001). Among children admitted with laboratory-confirmed malaria, the risk of high parasitaemia was higher during the pre-intervention period relative to the post-intervention period (age-adjusted PR: 1.62; 95% CI: 1.11 – 2.38; chi-squared p-value = 0.004), and the risk of severe anaemia was more than twofold greater during the pre-intervention period (age-adjusted PR: 2.47; 95% CI: 0.84 – 7.24; chi-squared p-value = 0.08). Antibiotic use was common, with 70.7% of all children with clinical malaria and 86.4% of children with slide-negative malaria receiving antibacterial therapy. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that both admissions for malaria and laboratory markers of clinical disease among children may be rapidly reduced following community-based malaria control efforts. Additionally, this study highlights the problem of over-diagnosis and over-treatment of malaria in malaria-endemic regions, especially as malaria prevalence falls. More accurate diagnosis and management of febrile illnesses is critically needed both now and as fever aetiologies change with further reductions in malaria. BioMed Central 2008-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2557016/ /pubmed/18752677 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-167 Text en Copyright © 2008 Sievers et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Sievers, Amy C
Lewey, Jenifer
Musafiri, Placide
Franke, Molly F
Bucyibaruta, Blaise J
Stulac, Sara N
Rich, Michael L
Karema, Corine
Daily, Johanna P
Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title_full Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title_fullStr Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title_short Reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural Rwanda
title_sort reduced paediatric hospitalizations for malaria and febrile illness patterns following implementation of community-based malaria control programme in rural rwanda
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2557016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18752677
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-7-167
work_keys_str_mv AT sieversamyc reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT leweyjenifer reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT musafiriplacide reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT frankemollyf reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT bucyibarutablaisej reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT stulacsaran reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT richmichaell reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT karemacorine reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda
AT dailyjohannap reducedpaediatrichospitalizationsformalariaandfebrileillnesspatternsfollowingimplementationofcommunitybasedmalariacontrolprogrammeinruralrwanda