Abstract

BackgroundFever case management is a major challenge for improved child health globally, despite existence of cheap and effective child survival health technologies. The integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) intervention of paediatric febrile illnesses though adopted by Uganda’s Ministry of Health to be implemented by community health workers, has not addressed the inaccess to life-saving medicines and diagnostics. Therefore, the iCCM intervention was implemented in private drug shops and evaluated for its effect on appropriate treatment of paediatric fever in a low malaria transmission setting in South Western Uganda.MethodsFrom June 2013 to September 2015, the effect of the iCCM intervention on drug seller paediatric fever management and adherence to iCCM guidelines was assessed in a quasi-experimental study in South Western Uganda. A total of 212 care-seeker exit interviews were done before and 285 after in the intervention arm as compared to 216 before and 268 care-seeker interviews at the end of the study period in the comparison arm. The intervention effect was assessed by difference-in-difference analysis of drug seller treatment practices against national treatment recommendations between the intervention and comparison arms. Observed proportions among care-seeker interviews were compared with corresponding proportions from 5795 child visits recorded in patient registries and 49 direct observations of drug seller–care-seeker encounters in intervention drug shops.ResultsThe iCCM intervention increased the appropriate treatment of uncomplicated malaria, pneumonia symptoms and non-bloody diarrhoea by 80.2% (95% CI 53.2–107.2), 65.5% (95% CI 51.6–79.4) and 31.4% (95% CI 1.6–61.2), respectively. Within the intervention arm, drug seller scores on appropriate treatment for pneumonia symptoms and diagnostic test use were the same among care-seeker exit interviews and direct observation. A linear trend (negative slope, − 0.009 p value < 0.001) was observed for proportions of child cases prescribed any antimicrobial medicine in the intervention arm drug shops.ConclusionsThe iCCM intervention improved appropriate treatment for uncomplicated malaria, pneumonia symptoms and diarrhoea. Drug seller adherence to iCCM guidelines was high, without causing excessive prescription of antimicrobial medicines in this study. Further research should assess whether this effect is sustained over time and under routine supervision models.

Highlights

  • Fever case management is a major challenge for improved child health globally, despite existence of cheap and effective child survival health technologies

  • The authors demonstrated that implementing an integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) intervention at retail drug shops increased appropriate treatment for uncomplicated malaria, pneumonia symptoms and non-bloody diarrhoea, which implied that a higher proportion of U5 children received the right medicine in the right dose, frequency and duration for the right indication in the intervention arm as compared to the comparison arm in South Western Uganda

  • This study illustrates that implementing the iCCM intervention at retail drug shops improved appropriate treatment for uncomplicated malaria and reduced presumptive treatment of the febrile child, and promoted drug seller adherence to iCCM guidelines, in lower malaria transmission settings of South Western Uganda

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Summary

Introduction

Fever case management is a major challenge for improved child health globally, despite existence of cheap and effective child survival health technologies. The integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) intervention of paediatric febrile illnesses though adopted by Uganda’s Ministry of Health to be implemented by community health workers, has not addressed the inaccess to life-saving medicines and diagnostics. The iCCM intervention was implemented in private drug shops and evaluated for its effect on appropriate treatment of paediatric fever in a low malaria transmission setting in South Western Uganda. Many Ugandan febrile children either do not receive prompt healthcare or get the wrong treatment or go untreated, despite existence of cheap and effective child medicines and diagnostics [5, 6]. Only 31% of under-five children who present with pneumonia symptoms receive an antibiotic, and 35% of diarrhoea cases receive oral rehydration salts (ORS), and only 2% receive zinc tablets [8]

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