Abstract

Over 1.9 billion individuals require preventive chemotherapy through mass drug administration (MDA). Community-directed MDA relies on volunteer community medicine distributors (CMDs) and their achievement of high coverage and compliance. Yet, it is unknown if village social networks influence effective MDA implementation by CMDs. In Mayuge District, Uganda, census-style surveys were conducted for 16,357 individuals from 3,491 households in 17 villages. Praziquantel, albendazole, and ivermectin were administered for one month in community-directed MDA to treat Schistosoma mansoni, hookworm, and lymphatic filariasis. Self-reported treatment outcomes, socioeconomic characteristics, friendship networks, and health advice networks were collected. We investigated systematically missed coverage and noncompliance. Coverage was defined as an eligible person being offered at least one drug by CMDs; compliance included ingesting at least one of the offered drugs. These outcomes were analyzed as a two-stage process using a Heckman selection model. To further assess if MDA through CMDs was working as intended, we examined the probability of accurate drug administration of 1) praziquantel, 2) both albendazole and ivermectin, and 3) all drugs. This analysis was conducted using bivariate Probit regression. Four indicators from each social network were examined: degree, betweenness centrality, closeness centrality, and the presence of a direct connection to CMDs. All models accounted for nested household and village standard errors. CMDs were more likely to offer medicines, and to accurately administer the drugs as trained by the national control programme, to individuals with high friendship degree (many connections) and high friendship closeness centrality (households that were only a short number of steps away from all other households in the network). Though high (88.59%), additional compliance was associated with directly trusting CMDs for health advice. Effective treatment provision requires addressing CMD biases towards influential, well-embedded individuals in friendship networks and utilizing health advice networks to increase village trust in CMDs.

Highlights

  • Over 1.9 billion people in 125 countries require mass drug administration (MDA) for at least one of seven neglected tropicalG.F

  • Soil-transmitted helminths, lymphatic filariasis, and schistosomiasis are the most prevalent infections treated through MDA (World Health Organization, 2015)

  • community medicine distributors (CMDs) first administer praziquantel for S. mansoni in week one of MDA revisit all households in week two of MDA to deliver both albendazole and ivermectin for hookworm and lymphatic filariasis

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Summary

Background

Over 1.9 billion people in 125 countries require mass drug administration (MDA) for at least one of seven neglected tropical. Soil-transmitted helminths, lymphatic filariasis, and schistosomiasis are the most prevalent infections treated through MDA (World Health Organization, 2015). Community-directed implementation is the most widely used MDA approach It is the cornerstone of the African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) (Homeida et al, 2002) and is recommended as the principal strategy for lymphatic filariasis treatment (World Health Organization, 2000). For schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminth control programmes including in Uganda, MDA is commonly implemented through primary schools where teachers treat children in attendance (World Health Organization, 2006). Due to over 50% S. mansoni prevalence in school-aged children, communitywide treatment for schistosomiasis has been ongoing since 2003 in our study area (Kabatereine et al, 2004) Despite their central role in MDA, the behaviors of CMDs are poorly understood. Is the implementation of MDA through CMDs working as intended and achieving unbiased communitywide treatment?

Participant sampling
Social networks
Network indicators
Treatment outcomes
Socioeconomic variables
Statistical analysis
Correlation of village coverage and compliance
Accuracy of drug delivery by CMDs
Network determinants of coverage
Overlap of friendship centrality and social status
Trust in CMDs and compliance
Discussion
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