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Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study

BACKGROUND: Presumptive treatment of childhood-malaria (PTCM) is common in Nigeria. Delayed laboratory result is blamed, with little attention on patients’ and providers’ roles. This study aimed to determine patient, provider and laboratory attributes that sustain PTCM in Nigeria. METHODS: Data coll...

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Autores principales: Ughasoro, Maduka D, Okoli, Chinedu C, Uzochukwu, Benjamin SC
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220678/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24289161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-436
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author Ughasoro, Maduka D
Okoli, Chinedu C
Uzochukwu, Benjamin SC
author_facet Ughasoro, Maduka D
Okoli, Chinedu C
Uzochukwu, Benjamin SC
author_sort Ughasoro, Maduka D
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Presumptive treatment of childhood-malaria (PTCM) is common in Nigeria. Delayed laboratory result is blamed, with little attention on patients’ and providers’ roles. This study aimed to determine patient, provider and laboratory attributes that sustain PTCM in Nigeria. METHODS: Data collection was from focus-group discussions for parents/guardians, and in-depth interviews involving providers and laboratory scientists in two tertiary hospitals. RESULTS: All parents/guardians agreed to a malaria test. Majority accepted to come back later for full treatment, provided that some treatment was commenced. Majority affirmed that their interests are on their children’s improvement. The providers practice presumptive treatment of childhood malaria, for the following reasons: (1) malaria is endemic and should be suspected and treated; (2) microscopy takes two days to be available and parents want immediate treatment for their children, thus delay may lead to self-medication; (3) relying on results for decision to treat creates an impression of incompetence; (4) rapid diagnostic test kits (RDTs) are not available in the consulting rooms and there is doubt about their reliability; (5) patients have already wasted time before being reviewed, so wasting more time on investigation is not advisable; (6) withhold of malaria treatment may be feasible in suspected uncomplicated malaria, but if severe, then anti-malarial treatment has to start immediately. Interviews of laboratory scientists showed that (1) malaria microscopy test cannot be urgent; it is done in batches and takes 24 hours to be ready; (2) a request of malaria test with other investigations on the same form, contributes to the delay; (3) RDTs are unavailable in the facilities. CONCLUSIONS: Provision of RDTs is the only feasible means to treatment of confirmed malaria at the time healthcare providers review a patient on day zero. In facilities that depend on microscopy; a common practice in resource poor countries, healthcare providers can depend on parental willingness to return later for full medication, to commence adjunctive care with antipyretics and multivitamins for uncomplicated malaria. In complicated malaria, supportive care - intravenous fluids, blood transfusion, oxygen therapy - can be commenced while awaiting the inclusion of anti-malarial drugs when the diagnosis of malaria is confirmed.
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spelling pubmed-42206782014-11-06 Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study Ughasoro, Maduka D Okoli, Chinedu C Uzochukwu, Benjamin SC Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Presumptive treatment of childhood-malaria (PTCM) is common in Nigeria. Delayed laboratory result is blamed, with little attention on patients’ and providers’ roles. This study aimed to determine patient, provider and laboratory attributes that sustain PTCM in Nigeria. METHODS: Data collection was from focus-group discussions for parents/guardians, and in-depth interviews involving providers and laboratory scientists in two tertiary hospitals. RESULTS: All parents/guardians agreed to a malaria test. Majority accepted to come back later for full treatment, provided that some treatment was commenced. Majority affirmed that their interests are on their children’s improvement. The providers practice presumptive treatment of childhood malaria, for the following reasons: (1) malaria is endemic and should be suspected and treated; (2) microscopy takes two days to be available and parents want immediate treatment for their children, thus delay may lead to self-medication; (3) relying on results for decision to treat creates an impression of incompetence; (4) rapid diagnostic test kits (RDTs) are not available in the consulting rooms and there is doubt about their reliability; (5) patients have already wasted time before being reviewed, so wasting more time on investigation is not advisable; (6) withhold of malaria treatment may be feasible in suspected uncomplicated malaria, but if severe, then anti-malarial treatment has to start immediately. Interviews of laboratory scientists showed that (1) malaria microscopy test cannot be urgent; it is done in batches and takes 24 hours to be ready; (2) a request of malaria test with other investigations on the same form, contributes to the delay; (3) RDTs are unavailable in the facilities. CONCLUSIONS: Provision of RDTs is the only feasible means to treatment of confirmed malaria at the time healthcare providers review a patient on day zero. In facilities that depend on microscopy; a common practice in resource poor countries, healthcare providers can depend on parental willingness to return later for full medication, to commence adjunctive care with antipyretics and multivitamins for uncomplicated malaria. In complicated malaria, supportive care - intravenous fluids, blood transfusion, oxygen therapy - can be commenced while awaiting the inclusion of anti-malarial drugs when the diagnosis of malaria is confirmed. BioMed Central 2013-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4220678/ /pubmed/24289161 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-436 Text en Copyright © 2013 Ughasoro 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
Ughasoro, Maduka D
Okoli, Chinedu C
Uzochukwu, Benjamin SC
Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title_full Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title_fullStr Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title_full_unstemmed Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title_short Qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast Nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
title_sort qualitative study of presumptive treatment of childhood malaria in third tier tertiary hospitals in southeast nigeria: a focus group and in-depth study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220678/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24289161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-12-436
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