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Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities

BACKGROUND: The ongoing west Africa Ebola-virus-disease epidemic has disrupted the entire health-care system in affected countries. Because of the overlap of symptoms of Ebola virus disease and malaria, the care delivery of malaria is particularly sensitive to the indirect effects of the current Ebo...

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Autores principales: Plucinski, Mateusz M, Guilavogui, Timothée, Sidikiba, Sidibe, Diakité, Nouman, Diakité, Souleymane, Dioubaté, Mohamed, Bah, Ibrahima, Hennessee, Ian, Butts, Jessica K, Halsey, Eric S, McElroy, Peter D, Kachur, S Patrick, Aboulhab, Jamila, James, Richard, Keita, Moussa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Ltd. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4669675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26116183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00061-4
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author Plucinski, Mateusz M
Guilavogui, Timothée
Sidikiba, Sidibe
Diakité, Nouman
Diakité, Souleymane
Dioubaté, Mohamed
Bah, Ibrahima
Hennessee, Ian
Butts, Jessica K
Halsey, Eric S
McElroy, Peter D
Kachur, S Patrick
Aboulhab, Jamila
James, Richard
Keita, Moussa
author_facet Plucinski, Mateusz M
Guilavogui, Timothée
Sidikiba, Sidibe
Diakité, Nouman
Diakité, Souleymane
Dioubaté, Mohamed
Bah, Ibrahima
Hennessee, Ian
Butts, Jessica K
Halsey, Eric S
McElroy, Peter D
Kachur, S Patrick
Aboulhab, Jamila
James, Richard
Keita, Moussa
author_sort Plucinski, Mateusz M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The ongoing west Africa Ebola-virus-disease epidemic has disrupted the entire health-care system in affected countries. Because of the overlap of symptoms of Ebola virus disease and malaria, the care delivery of malaria is particularly sensitive to the indirect effects of the current Ebola-virus-disease epidemic. We therefore characterise malaria case management in the context of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic and document the effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management. METHODS: We did a cross-sectional survey of public health facilities in Guinea in December, 2014. We selected the four prefectures most affected by Ebola virus disease and selected four randomly from prefectures without any reported cases of the disease. 60 health facilities were sampled in Ebola-affected and 60 in Ebola-unaffected prefectures. Study teams abstracted malaria case management indicators from registers for January to November for 2013 and 2014 and interviewed health-care workers. Nationwide weekly surveillance data for suspect malaria cases reported between 2011 and 2014 were analysed independently. Data for malaria indicators in 2014 were compared with previous years. FINDINGS: We noted substantial reductions in all-cause outpatient visits (by 23 103 [11%] of 214 899), cases of fever (by 20249 [15%] of 131 330), and patients treated with oral (by 22 655 [24%] of 94 785) and injectable (by 5219 [30%] of 17 684) antimalarial drugs in surveyed health facilities. In Ebola-affected prefectures, 73 of 98 interviewed community health workers were operational (74%, 95% CI 65–83) and 35 of 73 were actively treating malaria cases (48%, 36–60) compared with 106 of 112 (95%, 89–98) and 102 of 106 (96%, 91–99), respectively, in Ebola-unaffected prefectures. Nationwide, the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic was estimated to have resulted in 74 000 (71 000–77 000) fewer malaria cases seen at health facilities in 2014. INTERPRETATION: The reduction in the delivery of malaria care because of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic threatens malaria control in Guinea. Untreated and inappropriately treated malaria cases lead to excess malaria mortality and more fever cases in the community, impeding the Ebola-virus-disease response. FUNDING: Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and President's Malaria Initiative.
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spelling pubmed-46696752015-12-04 Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities Plucinski, Mateusz M Guilavogui, Timothée Sidikiba, Sidibe Diakité, Nouman Diakité, Souleymane Dioubaté, Mohamed Bah, Ibrahima Hennessee, Ian Butts, Jessica K Halsey, Eric S McElroy, Peter D Kachur, S Patrick Aboulhab, Jamila James, Richard Keita, Moussa Lancet Infect Dis Article BACKGROUND: The ongoing west Africa Ebola-virus-disease epidemic has disrupted the entire health-care system in affected countries. Because of the overlap of symptoms of Ebola virus disease and malaria, the care delivery of malaria is particularly sensitive to the indirect effects of the current Ebola-virus-disease epidemic. We therefore characterise malaria case management in the context of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic and document the effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management. METHODS: We did a cross-sectional survey of public health facilities in Guinea in December, 2014. We selected the four prefectures most affected by Ebola virus disease and selected four randomly from prefectures without any reported cases of the disease. 60 health facilities were sampled in Ebola-affected and 60 in Ebola-unaffected prefectures. Study teams abstracted malaria case management indicators from registers for January to November for 2013 and 2014 and interviewed health-care workers. Nationwide weekly surveillance data for suspect malaria cases reported between 2011 and 2014 were analysed independently. Data for malaria indicators in 2014 were compared with previous years. FINDINGS: We noted substantial reductions in all-cause outpatient visits (by 23 103 [11%] of 214 899), cases of fever (by 20249 [15%] of 131 330), and patients treated with oral (by 22 655 [24%] of 94 785) and injectable (by 5219 [30%] of 17 684) antimalarial drugs in surveyed health facilities. In Ebola-affected prefectures, 73 of 98 interviewed community health workers were operational (74%, 95% CI 65–83) and 35 of 73 were actively treating malaria cases (48%, 36–60) compared with 106 of 112 (95%, 89–98) and 102 of 106 (96%, 91–99), respectively, in Ebola-unaffected prefectures. Nationwide, the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic was estimated to have resulted in 74 000 (71 000–77 000) fewer malaria cases seen at health facilities in 2014. INTERPRETATION: The reduction in the delivery of malaria care because of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic threatens malaria control in Guinea. Untreated and inappropriately treated malaria cases lead to excess malaria mortality and more fever cases in the community, impeding the Ebola-virus-disease response. FUNDING: Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and President's Malaria Initiative. Elsevier Ltd. 2015-09 2015-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4669675/ /pubmed/26116183 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00061-4 Text en Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Plucinski, Mateusz M
Guilavogui, Timothée
Sidikiba, Sidibe
Diakité, Nouman
Diakité, Souleymane
Dioubaté, Mohamed
Bah, Ibrahima
Hennessee, Ian
Butts, Jessica K
Halsey, Eric S
McElroy, Peter D
Kachur, S Patrick
Aboulhab, Jamila
James, Richard
Keita, Moussa
Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title_full Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title_fullStr Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title_full_unstemmed Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title_short Effect of the Ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in Guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
title_sort effect of the ebola-virus-disease epidemic on malaria case management in guinea, 2014: a cross-sectional survey of health facilities
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4669675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26116183
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00061-4
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