Abstract

BackgroundThe main killer diseases of children all manifest as acute febrile illness, yet are curable with timely and adequate management. To avoid a fatal outcome, three essential steps must be completed: caretakers must recognize illness, decide to seek care and reach an appropriate source of care, and then receive appropriate treatment. In a fatal outcome some or all of these steps have failed and it remains to be elucidated to what extent these fatal outcomes are caused by local disease perceptions, inappropriate care-seeking or inadequate resources in the family or health system. This study explores caretakers' experiences of care-seeking for childhood febrile illness with fatal outcome in rural Uganda to elucidate the most influential barriers to adequate care.MethodsA mixed methods approach using structured Verbal/Social autopsy interviews and in-depth interviews was employed with 26 caretakers living in Iganga/Mayuge Demographic Surveillance Site who had lost a child 1–59 months old due to acute febrile illness between March and June 2006. In-depth interviews were analysed using content analysis with deductive category application.ResultsFinal categories of barriers to care were: 1) "Illness interpretation barriers" involving children who received delayed or inappropriate care due to caretakers' labelling of the illness, 2) "Barriers to seeking care" with gender roles and household financial constraints hindering adequate care and 3) "Barriers to receiving adequate treatment" revealing discontents with providers and possible deficiencies in quality of care. Resource constraints were identified as the underlying theme for adequate management, both at individual and at health system levels.ConclusionThe management of severely ill children in this rural setting has several shortcomings. However, the majority of children were seen by an allopathic health care provider during the final illness. Improvements of basic health care for children suffering from acute febrile illness are likely to contribute to a substantial reduction of fatal outcomes. Health care providers at all levels and private as well as public should receive training, support, equipment and supplies to enable basic health care for children suffering from common illnesses.

Highlights

  • The main killer diseases of children all manifest as acute febrile illness, yet are curable with timely and adequate management

  • Nine households belonged to the poorest quintile, six to the very poor, six to the poor, four to the less poor and one household belonged to the least poor household (p < 0.05)

  • Local illness concepts have an important, though limited, influence on the care-seeking for childhood febrile illness in this setting

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Summary

Introduction

The main killer diseases of children all manifest as acute febrile illness, yet are curable with timely and adequate management. This study explores caretakers' experiences of care-seeking for childhood febrile illness with fatal outcome in rural Uganda to elucidate the most influential barriers to adequate care. Six million children between one month and five years of age die from causes that could be prevented with existing interventions [1]. The majority of these deaths are due to only three diseases: pneumonia, malaria and diarrhoea. In Uganda, "omusudha" (hot body) is used for any childhood fever [8] and is frequently treated with antimalarial drugs [9] This may delay treatment for other febrile illnesses, in particular pneumonia since symptoms often overlap with those of malaria [10]

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