Abstract

In rural areas of South and Southeast Asia malaria is declining but febrile illnesses still account for substantial morbidity and mortality. Village health workers (VHWs) are often the first point of contact with the formal health system, and for patients with febrile illnesses they can provide early diagnosis and treatment of malaria. However, for the majority of febrile patients, VHWs lack the training, support and resources to provide further care. Consequently, treatable bacterial illnesses are missed, antibiotics are overused and poorly targeted, and patient attendance wanes along with declining malaria. This Open Letter announces the start of a new initiative, the Rural Febrile Illness (RFI) project, the first in a series of projects to be implemented as part of the South and Southeast Asian Community-based Trials Network (SEACTN) research programme. This multi-country, multi-site project will begin in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Myanmar and will define the epidemiological baseline of febrile illness in five remote and underserved areas of Asia where malaria endemicity is declining and access to health services is limited. The RFI project aims to determine the incidence, causes and outcomes of febrile illness; understand the opportunities, barriers and appetite for adjustment of the role of VHWs to include management of non-malarial febrile illnesses; and establish a network of community healthcare providers and facilities capable of implementing interventions designed to triage, diagnose and treat patients presenting with febrile illnesses within these communities in the future.

Highlights

  • The majority of individuals in South and Southeast Asia live in rural areas, often characterised by high levels of poverty and restricted access to healthcare[1,2,3]

  • Work Package C (WP-C) In Work Packages (WP)-C we will draw on the data collected in Work Package A (WP-A) and Work Package B (WP-B) to create temporally- and spatially-explicit electronic decision-support tools, designed to assist community health workers in their assessment, triage and treatment of patients presenting with febrile illnesses in rural and remote areas

  • WP-B Determining the aetiologies of febrile illnesses in patients attending rural health facilities To gain a comprehensive understanding of the causes of febrile illness in the region, we will recruit a cohort of patients attending two sentinel health facilities within four of the project areas

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Summary

26 Mar 2021 report report report

Kortz , University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco, USA. Any reports and responses or comments on the article can be found at the end of the article. Keywords Community Health Workers, Etiology, Fever, Primary Health Care, Rural Health, Southeastern Asia, Telemedicine, Western Asia, Village Health Workers. This article is included in the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU) gateway. Disclaimer The views expressed in this article are those of the authors. Publication in Wellcome Open Research does not imply endorsement by Wellcome

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Limitations
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Lao Statistics Bureau and UNICEF
World Health Organization
18. UK Wellcome Trust
21. World Health Organization: Acute Care
27. World Health Organization
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