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Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016

BACKGROUND: Malaria surveillance system strengthening is essential in the progress towards malaria elimination. In Nigeria, more attention is being given to this recently as the country is striving towards achieving elimination. However, the surveillance system performance is fraught with challenges...

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Autores principales: Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim, Ajumobi, Olufemi, Bamgboye, Eniola, Ajayi, IkeOluwapo, Nguku, Patrick
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7008566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32036790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40249-020-0629-2
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author Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim
Ajumobi, Olufemi
Bamgboye, Eniola
Ajayi, IkeOluwapo
Nguku, Patrick
author_facet Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim
Ajumobi, Olufemi
Bamgboye, Eniola
Ajayi, IkeOluwapo
Nguku, Patrick
author_sort Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Malaria surveillance system strengthening is essential in the progress towards malaria elimination. In Nigeria, more attention is being given to this recently as the country is striving towards achieving elimination. However, the surveillance system performance is fraught with challenges including poor data quality with varying magnitude by state. This study evaluated the operation of the Kano State malaria surveillance system and assessed its key attributes. METHODS: An observational study design comprising a survey, record review and secondary data analysis, and mixed methods data collection approach were used. Four key stakeholders’ and 35 Roll Back Malaria Focal Persons (RBMs) semi-structured interviews on operation of the system and attributes of the surveillance system, were conducted. We analyzed the abstracted 2013–2016 National Health Management Information System web-based malaria datasets. The surveillance system was evaluated using the “2001 United States Centers for Disease Control’s updated guidelines for Evaluating Public Health Surveillance Systems”. Data were described using means, standard deviation, frequencies and proportions. Chi-squared for linear trends was used. RESULTS: Overall, 24 RBMs (68.6%) had ≤ 15-year experience on malaria surveillance, 29 (82.9%) had formal training on malaria surveillance; 32 RBMs (91.4%) reported case definitions were easy-to-use, reporting forms were easy-to-fill and data flow channels were clearly defined. Twenty-seven respondents (69.2%) reported data tools could accommodate changes and all RBMs understood malaria case definitions. All respondents (4 stakeholders and 34 RBMs [97.1%]) expressed willingness to continue using the system and 33 (84.6%) reported analyzed data were used for decision-making. Public health facilities constituted the main data source. Overall, 65.0% of funding were from partner agencies. Trend of malaria cases showed significant decline (χ(2)(trend) = 7.49; P = 0.0006). Timeliness of reporting was below the target (≥ 80%), except being 82% in 2012. CONCLUSIONS: Malaria surveillance system in Kano State was simple, flexible, acceptable, useful and donor-driven but the data were not representative of all health facilities. Timeliness of reporting was suboptimal. We recommended reporting from private health facilities, strengthening human resource capacity for supportive supervision and ensuring adequate government funding to enhance the system’s representativeness and improve data quality.
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spelling pubmed-70085662020-02-13 Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016 Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim Ajumobi, Olufemi Bamgboye, Eniola Ajayi, IkeOluwapo Nguku, Patrick Infect Dis Poverty Research Article BACKGROUND: Malaria surveillance system strengthening is essential in the progress towards malaria elimination. In Nigeria, more attention is being given to this recently as the country is striving towards achieving elimination. However, the surveillance system performance is fraught with challenges including poor data quality with varying magnitude by state. This study evaluated the operation of the Kano State malaria surveillance system and assessed its key attributes. METHODS: An observational study design comprising a survey, record review and secondary data analysis, and mixed methods data collection approach were used. Four key stakeholders’ and 35 Roll Back Malaria Focal Persons (RBMs) semi-structured interviews on operation of the system and attributes of the surveillance system, were conducted. We analyzed the abstracted 2013–2016 National Health Management Information System web-based malaria datasets. The surveillance system was evaluated using the “2001 United States Centers for Disease Control’s updated guidelines for Evaluating Public Health Surveillance Systems”. Data were described using means, standard deviation, frequencies and proportions. Chi-squared for linear trends was used. RESULTS: Overall, 24 RBMs (68.6%) had ≤ 15-year experience on malaria surveillance, 29 (82.9%) had formal training on malaria surveillance; 32 RBMs (91.4%) reported case definitions were easy-to-use, reporting forms were easy-to-fill and data flow channels were clearly defined. Twenty-seven respondents (69.2%) reported data tools could accommodate changes and all RBMs understood malaria case definitions. All respondents (4 stakeholders and 34 RBMs [97.1%]) expressed willingness to continue using the system and 33 (84.6%) reported analyzed data were used for decision-making. Public health facilities constituted the main data source. Overall, 65.0% of funding were from partner agencies. Trend of malaria cases showed significant decline (χ(2)(trend) = 7.49; P = 0.0006). Timeliness of reporting was below the target (≥ 80%), except being 82% in 2012. CONCLUSIONS: Malaria surveillance system in Kano State was simple, flexible, acceptable, useful and donor-driven but the data were not representative of all health facilities. Timeliness of reporting was suboptimal. We recommended reporting from private health facilities, strengthening human resource capacity for supportive supervision and ensuring adequate government funding to enhance the system’s representativeness and improve data quality. BioMed Central 2020-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7008566/ /pubmed/32036790 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40249-020-0629-2 Text en © The Author(s). 2020 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Visa, Tyakaray Ibrahim
Ajumobi, Olufemi
Bamgboye, Eniola
Ajayi, IkeOluwapo
Nguku, Patrick
Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title_full Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title_fullStr Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title_short Evaluation of malaria surveillance system in Kano State, Nigeria, 2013–2016
title_sort evaluation of malaria surveillance system in kano state, nigeria, 2013–2016
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7008566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32036790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40249-020-0629-2
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