Cargando…

Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets

BACKGROUND: Effective case management is central to reducing malaria mortality and morbidity worldwide, but only a minority of those affected by malaria, have access to prompt effective treatment. In Kenya, the Division of Malaria Control is committed to ensuring that 80 percent of childhood fevers...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chuma, Jane, Abuya, Timothy, Memusi, Dorothy, Juma, Elizabeth, Akhwale, Willis, Ntwiga, Janet, Nyandigisi, Andrew, Tetteh, Gladys, Shretta, Rima, Amin, Abdinasir
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2773788/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19863788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-243
_version_ 1782173901172768768
author Chuma, Jane
Abuya, Timothy
Memusi, Dorothy
Juma, Elizabeth
Akhwale, Willis
Ntwiga, Janet
Nyandigisi, Andrew
Tetteh, Gladys
Shretta, Rima
Amin, Abdinasir
author_facet Chuma, Jane
Abuya, Timothy
Memusi, Dorothy
Juma, Elizabeth
Akhwale, Willis
Ntwiga, Janet
Nyandigisi, Andrew
Tetteh, Gladys
Shretta, Rima
Amin, Abdinasir
author_sort Chuma, Jane
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Effective case management is central to reducing malaria mortality and morbidity worldwide, but only a minority of those affected by malaria, have access to prompt effective treatment. In Kenya, the Division of Malaria Control is committed to ensuring that 80 percent of childhood fevers are treated with effective anti-malarial medicines within 24 hours of fever onset, but this target is largely unmet. This review aimed to document evidence on access to effective malaria treatment in Kenya, identify factors that influence access, and make recommendations on how to improve prompt access to effective malaria treatment. Since treatment-seeking patterns for malaria are similar in many settings in sub-Saharan Africa, the findings presented in this review have important lessons for other malaria endemic countries. METHODS: Internet searches were conducted in PUBMED (MEDLINE) and HINARI databases using specific search terms and strategies. Grey literature was obtained by soliciting reports from individual researchers working in the treatment-seeking field, from websites of major organizations involved in malaria control and from international reports. RESULTS: The review indicated that malaria treatment-seeking occurs mostly in the informal sector; that most fevers are treated, but treatment is often ineffective. Irrational drug use was identified as a problem in most studies, but determinants of this behaviour were not documented. Availability of non-recommended medicines over-the-counter and the presence of substandard anti-malarials in the market are well documented. Demand side determinants of access include perception of illness causes, severity and timing of treatment, perceptions of treatment efficacy, simplicity of regimens and ability to pay. Supply side determinants include distance to health facilities, availability of medicines, prescribing and dispensing practices and quality of medicines. Policy level factors are around the complexity and unclear messages regarding drug policy changes. CONCLUSION: Kenya, like many other African countries, is still far from achieving the Abuja targets. The government, with support from donors, should invest adequately in mechanisms that promote access to effective treatment. Such approaches should focus on factors influencing multiple dimensions of access and will require the cooperation of all stakeholders working in malaria control.
format Text
id pubmed-2773788
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27737882009-11-06 Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets Chuma, Jane Abuya, Timothy Memusi, Dorothy Juma, Elizabeth Akhwale, Willis Ntwiga, Janet Nyandigisi, Andrew Tetteh, Gladys Shretta, Rima Amin, Abdinasir Malar J Review BACKGROUND: Effective case management is central to reducing malaria mortality and morbidity worldwide, but only a minority of those affected by malaria, have access to prompt effective treatment. In Kenya, the Division of Malaria Control is committed to ensuring that 80 percent of childhood fevers are treated with effective anti-malarial medicines within 24 hours of fever onset, but this target is largely unmet. This review aimed to document evidence on access to effective malaria treatment in Kenya, identify factors that influence access, and make recommendations on how to improve prompt access to effective malaria treatment. Since treatment-seeking patterns for malaria are similar in many settings in sub-Saharan Africa, the findings presented in this review have important lessons for other malaria endemic countries. METHODS: Internet searches were conducted in PUBMED (MEDLINE) and HINARI databases using specific search terms and strategies. Grey literature was obtained by soliciting reports from individual researchers working in the treatment-seeking field, from websites of major organizations involved in malaria control and from international reports. RESULTS: The review indicated that malaria treatment-seeking occurs mostly in the informal sector; that most fevers are treated, but treatment is often ineffective. Irrational drug use was identified as a problem in most studies, but determinants of this behaviour were not documented. Availability of non-recommended medicines over-the-counter and the presence of substandard anti-malarials in the market are well documented. Demand side determinants of access include perception of illness causes, severity and timing of treatment, perceptions of treatment efficacy, simplicity of regimens and ability to pay. Supply side determinants include distance to health facilities, availability of medicines, prescribing and dispensing practices and quality of medicines. Policy level factors are around the complexity and unclear messages regarding drug policy changes. CONCLUSION: Kenya, like many other African countries, is still far from achieving the Abuja targets. The government, with support from donors, should invest adequately in mechanisms that promote access to effective treatment. Such approaches should focus on factors influencing multiple dimensions of access and will require the cooperation of all stakeholders working in malaria control. BioMed Central 2009-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2773788/ /pubmed/19863788 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-243 Text en Copyright © 2009 Chuma 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 Review
Chuma, Jane
Abuya, Timothy
Memusi, Dorothy
Juma, Elizabeth
Akhwale, Willis
Ntwiga, Janet
Nyandigisi, Andrew
Tetteh, Gladys
Shretta, Rima
Amin, Abdinasir
Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title_full Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title_fullStr Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title_full_unstemmed Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title_short Reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in Kenya: implications for meeting the Abuja targets
title_sort reviewing the literature on access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in kenya: implications for meeting the abuja targets
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2773788/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19863788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-243
work_keys_str_mv AT chumajane reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT abuyatimothy reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT memusidorothy reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT jumaelizabeth reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT akhwalewillis reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT ntwigajanet reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT nyandigisiandrew reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT tettehgladys reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT shrettarima reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets
AT aminabdinasir reviewingtheliteratureonaccesstopromptandeffectivemalariatreatmentinkenyaimplicationsformeetingtheabujatargets