Examination of factors impacting spitting or vomiting among children under 5 years of age during seasonal malaria chemoprevention: a quantitative study in Burkina Faso, Chad, Nigeria and Togo.

IF 3.6 Q1 TROPICAL MEDICINE Tropical Medicine and Health Pub Date : 2024-11-12 DOI:10.1186/s41182-024-00642-z
Chen Gao, Sikai Huang, Taiwo Ibinaiye, Benoît Sawadogo, Adama Traore, Cheick Saïd Compaoré, Fantche Awokou, Chukwudi A Nnaji, Kevin Baker, Duoquan Wang, Sol Richardson
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Abstract

Background: Since 2012, the World Health Organization has recommended seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine plus amodiaquine (SPAQ) for children aged 3-⁠59 months in regions where malaria transmission is seasonal. Full ingestion of SMC medicines without spitting or vomiting during a complete 3-day course is critical to ensure effectiveness of SMC medicines and to avoid development of antimalarial resistance. Although evidence suggests that spitting or vomiting is not rare, there is limited analytical evidence on potential factors associated with spitting or vomiting in SMC campaigns.

Methods: We utilized data from SMC coverage surveys conducted in Burkina Faso, Chad, Togo and Nigeria between 2020 and 2022. Episodes of spitting or vomiting were defined as SMC-eligible children spitting out most of the dose or vomiting the entire dose within 30 min of SPAQ administration as reported by primary caregivers. We conducted a cross-sectional study using mixed-effects logistic regression with variables including household socioeconomic variables and caregiver knowledge of SMC, to identify factors associated with spitting or vomiting.

Results: The proportion of SMC-eligible children spitting or vomiting SPAQ doses ranged from 1.81% in Nigeria to 4.36% in Chad. The odds of spitting or vomiting were lower among children administered medicines under community distributor (CD) supervision, and whose primary caregivers had a high degree of knowledge of SMC. Spitting or vomiting were negatively associated with caregiver adherence to AQ administration and caregiver reporting of children's adverse reactions to SMC medicines. Over half of the children experiencing a spitting or vomiting episode did not receive a replacement dose from CDs. Redosing was positively associated with caregiver educational attainment, caregiver knowledge of SMC, and directly supervised medicine administration.

Conclusions: CD-supervised administration of SPAQ can strengthen community engagement strategies to enhance appropriate administration and full ingestion of SMC medicines according to the SMC delivery protocol.

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季节性疟疾化学预防期间影响 5 岁以下儿童吐奶或呕吐的因素研究:布基纳法索、乍得、尼日利亚和多哥的定量研究。
背景:自 2012 年起,世界卫生组织建议在疟疾季节性传播地区为 3-59 个月大的儿童使用磺胺乙胺嘧啶加阿莫地喹(SPAQ)进行季节性疟疾化学预防(SMC)。在为期 3 天的完整疗程中,完全摄入 SMC 药物而不吐痰或呕吐对于确保 SMC 药物的有效性和避免产生抗疟药物抗药性至关重要。虽然有证据表明吐药或呕吐的情况并不罕见,但有关 SMC 活动中吐药或呕吐的潜在相关因素的分析证据却很有限:我们利用了 2020 年至 2022 年期间在布基纳法索、乍得、多哥和尼日利亚进行的 SMC 覆盖率调查数据。根据主要照顾者的报告,吐奶或呕吐事件是指符合 SMC 条件的儿童在服用 SPAQ 后 30 分钟内吐出大部分剂量或呕吐全部剂量。我们采用混合效应逻辑回归法进行了一项横断面研究,变量包括家庭社会经济变量和护理人员对SMC的了解程度,以确定与吐奶或呕吐相关的因素:符合SMC条件的儿童吐奶或呕吐SPAQ剂量的比例从尼日利亚的1.81%到乍得的4.36%不等。在社区配药员(CD)的监督下用药的儿童中,吐药或呕吐的几率较低,而且这些儿童的主要照顾者对SMC有较高的了解。吐奶或呕吐与看护人是否坚持 AQ 给药以及看护人是否报告儿童对 SMC 药物的不良反应呈负相关。半数以上出现吐奶或呕吐症状的儿童没有从 CD 处获得替代剂量。重新给药与护理人员的教育程度、护理人员对 SMC 的了解程度以及直接监督给药呈正相关:在 CD 监督下服用 SPAQ 可以加强社区参与策略,从而促进按照 SMC 给药方案适当服用和完全摄入 SMC 药物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Tropical Medicine and Health
Tropical Medicine and Health TROPICAL MEDICINE-
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
90
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊最新文献
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