定性评估农村医务工作者对患病儿童疟疾的管理。

MalariaWorld journal Pub Date : 2015-06-18 eCollection Date: 2015-01-01 DOI:10.5281/zenodo.10870159
Ayodele S Jegede, Ikeoluwapo O Ajayi, Frederick O Oshiname, Catherine O Falade, Daniel Chandramohan, Hamade Prudence, Jayne Webster, Ebenezer Baba
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:发热性疾病是撒哈拉以南非洲五岁以下儿童发病和死亡的常见原因。有效管理无并发症疟疾病例的建议策略是在使用青蒿素综合疗法(ACT)之前进行寄生虫学确认。目前缺乏定性信息来解释影响卫生工作者疟疾病例管理实践的因素。本研究探讨了卫生管理人员和医疗服务提供者对两个地方政府辖区(Katcha 和 Gbako)选定的初级卫生保健(PHC)设施中五岁以下儿童无并发症疟疾病例管理的看法,作为尼日利亚尼日尔州计划的能力建设干预基线的一部分:受访者包括州和地方政府区域一级的卫生计划管理人员以及一线卫生工作者,这些人员是有目的性地挑选出来的,涵盖了参与患病儿童病例管理的一系列干部。探讨的问题包括病史采集、诊断、疟疾的适当诊断、疟疾处方、转诊和坚持转诊。使用 Nvivo 定性软件(第 8 版)对数据进行编码,并对内容进行分析:结果:卫生工作者往往没有正确地进行病史采集。疟疾治疗并非基于寄生虫诊断。大多数卫生工作者表示,他们开出的青蒿素综合疗法处方用于治疗假定的无并发症疟疾。护理人员的偏好、交通系统不完善以及缺乏财政资源导致转诊建议得不到很好的遵守。医护人员不在工作岗位也阻碍了服务的有效提供。在没有寄生虫诊断的情况下,处方青蒿素综合疗法作为无并发症疟疾的一线治疗是标准的病例管理做法:结论:在所研究的年龄组中,基于寄生虫的疟疾诊断必然会使非疟疾发热病例得到更好的治疗。为支持疟疾寄生虫诊断模式的转变,需要持续开展能力建设,以提高对当前寄生虫诊断建议和良好临床实践的遵从度。
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Qualitative assessment of rural health workers' management of malaria in sick children.

Background: Febrile illnesses are common causes of morbidity and mortality among under-five children in sub-Saharan Africa. The recommended strategy for effective case management of uncomplicated malaria is parasitological confirmation prior to use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). There is a lack of qualitative information explaining factors, which influence malaria case management practices among health workers. This study explores the perceptions of health managers and health care providers on the case management of uncomplicated malaria among under-fives in selected primary health care (PHC) facilities of two Local Government Areas (LGAs), Katcha and Gbako, as part of baselines for capacity-building interventions planned in Niger State, Nigeria.

Methods: Interviewees included state- and LGA-level health programme managers, and frontline health workers purposively selected to cover a range of cadres involved in case management of sick children. Issues explored were history taking, diagnosis, appropriate diagnosis of malaria, prescription for malaria, referrals and adherence to referral. Data coding was carried out with Nvivo qualitative software (version 8) and content analysed.

Results: History taking was often not carried out appropriately by the health workers. Treatment of malaria was not based on parasite-based diagnosis. Most of the health workers reported that they prescribed ACTs for treating presumed uncomplicated malaria. Care givers' preferences, poor transportation systems and lack of financial resources led to poor adherence to referral advice. Absence of health workers from their duty post hindered effective service delivery. Prescription of ACTs as a first line of treatment for uncomplicated malaria without a parasite-based diagnosis was the standard case management practice.

Conclusion: Parasite-based diagnosis for malaria will invariably lead to better treatment for non-malaria fever cases among the studied age group. Continuous capacity building aimed at improving adherence to current recommendations on parasite-based diagnosis and good clinical practice would be required to support the paradigm shift to parasite-based diagnosis of malaria.

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