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Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda

BACKGROUND: Deployment of highly effective artemisinin-based combination therapy for treating uncomplicated malaria calls for better targeting of malaria treatment to improve case management and minimize drug pressure for selecting resistant parasites. The Integrated Management of Malaria curriculum...

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Autores principales: Namagembe, Allen, Ssekabira, Umaru, Weaver, Marcia R, Blum, Nancy, Burnett, Sarah, Dorsey, Grant, Sebuyira, Lydia Mpanga, Ojaku, Alex, Schneider, Gisela, Willis, Kelly, Yeka, Adoke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3342908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22330281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-44
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author Namagembe, Allen
Ssekabira, Umaru
Weaver, Marcia R
Blum, Nancy
Burnett, Sarah
Dorsey, Grant
Sebuyira, Lydia Mpanga
Ojaku, Alex
Schneider, Gisela
Willis, Kelly
Yeka, Adoke
author_facet Namagembe, Allen
Ssekabira, Umaru
Weaver, Marcia R
Blum, Nancy
Burnett, Sarah
Dorsey, Grant
Sebuyira, Lydia Mpanga
Ojaku, Alex
Schneider, Gisela
Willis, Kelly
Yeka, Adoke
author_sort Namagembe, Allen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Deployment of highly effective artemisinin-based combination therapy for treating uncomplicated malaria calls for better targeting of malaria treatment to improve case management and minimize drug pressure for selecting resistant parasites. The Integrated Management of Malaria curriculum was developed to train multi-disciplinary teams of clinical, laboratory and health information assistants. METHODS: Evaluation of training was conducted in nine health facilities that were Uganda Malaria Surveillance Programme (UMSP) sites. From December 2006 to June 2007, 194 health professionals attended a six-day course. One-hundred and one of 118 (86%) clinicians were observed during patient encounters by expert clinicians at baseline and during three follow-up visits approximately six weeks, 12 weeks and one year after the course. Experts used a standardized tool for children less than five years of age and similar tool for patients five or more years of age. Seventeen of 30 laboratory professionals (57%) were assessed for preparation of malaria blood smears and ability to interpret smear results of 30 quality control slides. RESULTS: Percentage of patients at baseline and first follow-up, respectively, with proper history-taking was 21% and 43%, thorough physical examination 18% and 56%, correct diagnosis 51% and 98%, treatment in compliance with national policy 42% and 86%, and appropriate patient education 17% and 83%. In estimates that adjusted for individual effects and a matched sample, relative risks were 1.86 (95% CI: 1.20,2.88) for history-taking, 2.66 (95%CI: 1.60,4.41) for physical examination, 1.77 (95%CI: 1.41,2.23) for diagnosis, 1.96 (95%CI: 1.46,2.63) for treatment, and 4.47 (95%CI: 2.68,7.46) for patient education. Results were similar for subsequent follow-up and in sub-samples stratified by patient age. Quality of malaria blood smear preparation improved from 21.6% at baseline to 67.3% at first follow-up (p < 0.008); sensitivity of interpretation of quality control slides increased from 48.6% to 70.6% (p < 0.199) and specificity increased from 72.1% to 77.2% (p < 0.736). Results were similar for subsequent follow-up, with the exception of a significant increase in specificity (94.2%, p < 0.036) at one year. CONCLUSION: A multi-disciplinary team training resulted in statistically significant improvements in clinical and laboratory skills. As a joint programme, the effects cannot be distinguished from UMSP activities, but lend support to long-term, on-going capacity-building and surveillance interventions.
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spelling pubmed-33429082012-05-04 Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda Namagembe, Allen Ssekabira, Umaru Weaver, Marcia R Blum, Nancy Burnett, Sarah Dorsey, Grant Sebuyira, Lydia Mpanga Ojaku, Alex Schneider, Gisela Willis, Kelly Yeka, Adoke Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Deployment of highly effective artemisinin-based combination therapy for treating uncomplicated malaria calls for better targeting of malaria treatment to improve case management and minimize drug pressure for selecting resistant parasites. The Integrated Management of Malaria curriculum was developed to train multi-disciplinary teams of clinical, laboratory and health information assistants. METHODS: Evaluation of training was conducted in nine health facilities that were Uganda Malaria Surveillance Programme (UMSP) sites. From December 2006 to June 2007, 194 health professionals attended a six-day course. One-hundred and one of 118 (86%) clinicians were observed during patient encounters by expert clinicians at baseline and during three follow-up visits approximately six weeks, 12 weeks and one year after the course. Experts used a standardized tool for children less than five years of age and similar tool for patients five or more years of age. Seventeen of 30 laboratory professionals (57%) were assessed for preparation of malaria blood smears and ability to interpret smear results of 30 quality control slides. RESULTS: Percentage of patients at baseline and first follow-up, respectively, with proper history-taking was 21% and 43%, thorough physical examination 18% and 56%, correct diagnosis 51% and 98%, treatment in compliance with national policy 42% and 86%, and appropriate patient education 17% and 83%. In estimates that adjusted for individual effects and a matched sample, relative risks were 1.86 (95% CI: 1.20,2.88) for history-taking, 2.66 (95%CI: 1.60,4.41) for physical examination, 1.77 (95%CI: 1.41,2.23) for diagnosis, 1.96 (95%CI: 1.46,2.63) for treatment, and 4.47 (95%CI: 2.68,7.46) for patient education. Results were similar for subsequent follow-up and in sub-samples stratified by patient age. Quality of malaria blood smear preparation improved from 21.6% at baseline to 67.3% at first follow-up (p < 0.008); sensitivity of interpretation of quality control slides increased from 48.6% to 70.6% (p < 0.199) and specificity increased from 72.1% to 77.2% (p < 0.736). Results were similar for subsequent follow-up, with the exception of a significant increase in specificity (94.2%, p < 0.036) at one year. CONCLUSION: A multi-disciplinary team training resulted in statistically significant improvements in clinical and laboratory skills. As a joint programme, the effects cannot be distinguished from UMSP activities, but lend support to long-term, on-going capacity-building and surveillance interventions. BioMed Central 2012-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3342908/ /pubmed/22330281 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-44 Text en Copyright ©2012 Namagembe et al; 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
Namagembe, Allen
Ssekabira, Umaru
Weaver, Marcia R
Blum, Nancy
Burnett, Sarah
Dorsey, Grant
Sebuyira, Lydia Mpanga
Ojaku, Alex
Schneider, Gisela
Willis, Kelly
Yeka, Adoke
Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title_full Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title_fullStr Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title_short Improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in Uganda
title_sort improved clinical and laboratory skills after team-based, malaria case management training of health care professionals in uganda
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3342908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22330281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-11-44
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