Abstract

BackgroundNational malaria control programmes and international agencies are keen to scale-up the use of effective rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for malaria. The high proportion of the Ugandan population seeking care at drug shops makes these outlets attractive as providers of malaria RDTs. However, there is no precedent for blood testing at drug shops and little is known about how such tests might be perceived and used. Understanding use of drug shops by communities in Uganda is essential to inform the design of interventions to introduce RDTs.MethodsWe conducted a qualitative study, with 10 community focus group discussions, and 18 in-depth interviews with drug shop attendants, health workers and district health officials. The formative study was carried out in Mukono district, central Uganda an area of high malaria endemicity from May-July 2009.ResultsDrug shops were perceived by the community as important in treating malaria and there was awareness among most drug sellers and the community that not all febrile illnesses were malaria. The idea of introducing RDTs for malaria diagnosis in drug shops was attractive to most respondents. It was anticipated that RDTs would improve access to effective treatment of malaria, offset high costs associated with poor treatment, and avoid irrational drug use. However, communities did express fear that drug shops would overprice RDTs, raising the overall treatment cost for malaria. Other fears included poor adherence to the RDT result, reuse of RDTs leading to infections and fear that RDTs would be used to test for human immune deficiency virus (HIV). All drug shops visited had no record on patient data and referral of cases to health units was noted to be poor.ConclusionThese results not only provide useful lessons for implementing the intervention study but have wide implications for scaling up malaria treatment in drug shops.

Highlights

  • National malaria control programmes and international agencies are keen to scale-up the use of effective rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for malaria

  • Role of drug shops Community members, health workers and the district health officials acknowledged the importance of drug shops play in providing health care

  • Current diagnosis and treatment practices The most common methods of malaria diagnosis to occur at registered drug shops were syndromic and trial-and-error approaches

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Summary

Introduction

National malaria control programmes and international agencies are keen to scale-up the use of effective rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for malaria. Understanding use of drug shops by communities in Uganda is essential to inform the design of interventions to introduce RDTs. In Uganda, malaria is highly endemic and the leading cause of morbidity and mortality [1]. Effective case management of malaria is recommended as one of the interventions to control malaria. This is limited by inadequate diagnostic facilities. It has been shown that more than 90% of malaria patients who are negative for malaria were prescribed anti-malarial drugs. Based on this and other findings, it has been

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