Cargando…

Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the pneumonia specific case fatality rate over time following the implementation of a Child Lung Health Programme (CLHP) within the existing government health services in Malawi to improve delivery of pneumonia case management. METHODS: A prospective, nationwide public health...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Enarson, Penelope M., Gie, Robert P., Mwansambo, Charles C., Maganga, Ellubey R., Lombard, Carl J., Enarson, Donald A., Graham, Stephen M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4106861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25050894
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102955
_version_ 1782327542837936128
author Enarson, Penelope M.
Gie, Robert P.
Mwansambo, Charles C.
Maganga, Ellubey R.
Lombard, Carl J.
Enarson, Donald A.
Graham, Stephen M.
author_facet Enarson, Penelope M.
Gie, Robert P.
Mwansambo, Charles C.
Maganga, Ellubey R.
Lombard, Carl J.
Enarson, Donald A.
Graham, Stephen M.
author_sort Enarson, Penelope M.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the pneumonia specific case fatality rate over time following the implementation of a Child Lung Health Programme (CLHP) within the existing government health services in Malawi to improve delivery of pneumonia case management. METHODS: A prospective, nationwide public health intervention was studied to evaluate the impact on pneumonia specific case fatality rate (CFR) in infants and young children (0 to 59 months of age) following the implementation of the CLHP. The implementation was step-wise from October 1(st) 2000 until 31(st) December 2005 within paediatric inpatient wards in 24 of 25 district hospitals in Malawi. Data analysis compared recorded outcomes in the first three months of the intervention (the control period) to the period after that, looking at trend over time and variation by calendar month, age group, severity of disease and region of the country. The analysis was repeated standardizing the follow-up period by using only the first 15 months after implementation at each district hospital. FINDINGS: Following implementation, 47,228 children were admitted to hospital for severe/very severe pneumonia with an overall CFR of 9•8%. In both analyses, the highest CFR was in the children 2 to 11 months, and those with very severe pneumonia. The majority (64%) of cases, 2–59 months, had severe pneumonia. In this group there was a significant effect of the intervention Odds Ratio (OR) 0•70 (95%CI: 0•50–0•98); p = 0•036), while in the same age group children treated for very severe pneumonia there was no interventional benefit (OR 0•97 (95%CI: 0•72–1•30); p = 0•8). No benefit was observed for neonates (OR 0•83 (95%CI: 0•56–1•22); p = 0•335). CONCLUSIONS: The nationwide implementation of the CLHP significantly reduced CFR in Malawian infants and children (2–59 months) treated for severe pneumonia. Reasons for the lack of benefit for neonates, infants and children with very severe pneumonia requires further research.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4106861
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-41068612014-07-23 Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management Enarson, Penelope M. Gie, Robert P. Mwansambo, Charles C. Maganga, Ellubey R. Lombard, Carl J. Enarson, Donald A. Graham, Stephen M. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the pneumonia specific case fatality rate over time following the implementation of a Child Lung Health Programme (CLHP) within the existing government health services in Malawi to improve delivery of pneumonia case management. METHODS: A prospective, nationwide public health intervention was studied to evaluate the impact on pneumonia specific case fatality rate (CFR) in infants and young children (0 to 59 months of age) following the implementation of the CLHP. The implementation was step-wise from October 1(st) 2000 until 31(st) December 2005 within paediatric inpatient wards in 24 of 25 district hospitals in Malawi. Data analysis compared recorded outcomes in the first three months of the intervention (the control period) to the period after that, looking at trend over time and variation by calendar month, age group, severity of disease and region of the country. The analysis was repeated standardizing the follow-up period by using only the first 15 months after implementation at each district hospital. FINDINGS: Following implementation, 47,228 children were admitted to hospital for severe/very severe pneumonia with an overall CFR of 9•8%. In both analyses, the highest CFR was in the children 2 to 11 months, and those with very severe pneumonia. The majority (64%) of cases, 2–59 months, had severe pneumonia. In this group there was a significant effect of the intervention Odds Ratio (OR) 0•70 (95%CI: 0•50–0•98); p = 0•036), while in the same age group children treated for very severe pneumonia there was no interventional benefit (OR 0•97 (95%CI: 0•72–1•30); p = 0•8). No benefit was observed for neonates (OR 0•83 (95%CI: 0•56–1•22); p = 0•335). CONCLUSIONS: The nationwide implementation of the CLHP significantly reduced CFR in Malawian infants and children (2–59 months) treated for severe pneumonia. Reasons for the lack of benefit for neonates, infants and children with very severe pneumonia requires further research. Public Library of Science 2014-07-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4106861/ /pubmed/25050894 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102955 Text en © 2014 Enarson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Enarson, Penelope M.
Gie, Robert P.
Mwansambo, Charles C.
Maganga, Ellubey R.
Lombard, Carl J.
Enarson, Donald A.
Graham, Stephen M.
Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title_full Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title_fullStr Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title_short Reducing Deaths from Severe Pneumonia in Children in Malawi by Improving Delivery of Pneumonia Case Management
title_sort reducing deaths from severe pneumonia in children in malawi by improving delivery of pneumonia case management
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4106861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25050894
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0102955
work_keys_str_mv AT enarsonpenelopem reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT gierobertp reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT mwansambocharlesc reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT magangaellubeyr reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT lombardcarlj reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT enarsondonalda reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement
AT grahamstephenm reducingdeathsfromseverepneumoniainchildreninmalawibyimprovingdeliveryofpneumoniacasemanagement