Abstract

BackgroundCommunity Case Management of Malaria (CCMM) has been implemented through community health workers (CHWs) in many countries. Existing studies have shown that CHWs can be viable means of implementing CCMM. However, not many studies have examined the coverage under large-scale CCMM programmes. India is a big contributor to global malaria burden. Chhattisgarh is a leading state in India in terms of malaria incidence and mortality. CCMM was implemented on a large scale through the ‘mitanin’ CHWs in rural Chhattisgarh from 2015. Under CCMM, 37,696 CHWs in 84 high-burden administrative blocks of the state were trained and equipped with rapid diagnostic tests (RDT), artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and chloroquine.MethodsThis descriptive quantitative study assesses coverage of CCMM in detection and treatment of Malaria over three rounds of household surveys—2015, 2016 and 2018. Household-interviews covered more than 15,000 individuals in each round, using multi-stage random sampling across the 84 blocks. The main objectives were to find out the coverage in identification and treatment of malaria and the share of CHWs in them. A 15-days recall was used to find out cases of fever and healthcare sought by them.ResultsIn 2018, 62% of febrile cases in rural population contacted CHWs. RDT, ACT and chloroquine were available with 96%, 80% and 95% of CHWs, respectively. From 2015 to 2018, the share of CHWs in testing of febrile cases increased from 34 to 70%, while it increased from 28 to 69% in treatment of malaria cases. CHWs performed better than other providers in treatment-completion and administered medication under direct observation to 72% of cases they treated.ConclusionThis study adds to one of the most crucial but relatively less reported area of CCMM programmes, i.e. the extent of coverage of the total febrile population by CHWs, which subsequently determines the actual coverage of case-management in malaria. Mitanin-CHWs achieved high coverage and treatment-completion rates that were rarely reported in context of large-scale CCMM elsewhere. Close to community, well-trained CHWs with sufficient supplies of rapid tests and anti-malarial drugs can play a key role in achieving the desired coverage in malaria-management.

Highlights

  • Community Case Management of Malaria (CCMM) has been implemented through community health workers (CHWs) in many countries

  • The indicators of ‘coverage’ as used in this study were: a) Proportion of fever cases who came in contact with mitanin-CHWs b) Proportion of fever cases RD tested for malaria by mitanin-CHWs c) Proportion of malaria cases treated by mitaninCHWs d) Proportion of malaria cases provided complete treatment under direct observation by CHWs (Adherence)

  • rapid diagnostic tests (RDT), artemisinin-based combinations and chloroquine were available with 96%, 80% and 95% of CHWs, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Community Case Management of Malaria (CCMM) has been implemented through community health workers (CHWs) in many countries. Chhattisgarh is a leading state in India in terms of malaria incidence and mortality. CCMM was implemented on a large scale through the ‘mitanin’ CHWs in rural Chhattisgarh from 2015. Within India, Chhattisgarh state reported the second-highest number of malaria cases amongst all states [2]. Chhattisgarh represents around 2% of India’s population, but contributed to 12% of malaria cases in 2014 [2, 3]. The state has 44% of its area under forests and around 31% of population belongs to indigenous tribes [4] It was termed as a highburden state for malaria with an annual parasite incidence (API) of 4.72 per 1000 population recorded in 2014 [2]. More than 80% of reported malaria cases were due to Plasmodium falciparum [2]

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