Operational Coverage and Timeliness of Reactive Case Detection for Malaria Elimination in Zanzibar, Tanzania

被引:11
作者
van der Horst, Tina [1 ,2 ]
Al-mafazy, Abdul-wahid [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Fakih, Bakar Shariff [4 ]
Stuck, Logan [5 ]
Ali, Abdullah [3 ]
Yukich, Joshua [5 ]
Hetzel, Manuel W. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Swiss Trop & Publ Hlth Inst, Socinstr 57, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland
[2] Univ Basel, Basel, Switzerland
[3] Minist Hlth, Zanzibar Malaria Eliminat Programme, Zanzibar, Tanzania
[4] Ifakara Hlth Inst, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
[5] Tulane Univ, Sch Publ Hlth & Trop Med, Ctr Appl Malaria Res & Evaluat, New Orleans, LA USA
关键词
CAMPAIGNS;
D O I
10.4269/ajtmh.19-0505
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Since 2012, the Zanzibar Malaria Elimination Program has been implementing reactive case detection (RACD). Health facility (HF) staff send individual malaria case notifications by using mobile phones, triggering a review of HF records and malaria testing and treatment at the household level by a district malaria surveillance officer. We assessed the completeness and timeliness of this system, from case notification to household-level response. We reviewed two years (2015-2016) of primary register information in 40 randomly selected HFs on Zanzibar's two islands Unguja and Pemba and database records of case notifications from all registered HFs for the period 2013-16. The operational coverage of the system was calculated as proportion of HF-registered cases that were successfully reviewed and followed up at their household. Timeliness was defined as completion of each step within 1 day. Public HFs notified almost all registered cases (91% in Unguja and 87% in Pemba), and 74% of cases registered at public HFs were successfully followed up at their household in Unguja and 79% in Pemba. Timely operational coverage (defined as each step, diagnosis to notification, notification to review, and review to household-level response, completed within 1 day) was achieved for only 25% of registered cases in Unguja and 30% in Pemba. Records and data from private HFs on Unguja indicated poor notification performance in the private sector. Although the RACD system in Zanzibar achieved high operational coverage, timeliness was suboptimal. Patients diagnosed with malaria at private HFs and hospitals appeared to be largely missed by the RACD system.
引用
收藏
页码:298 / 306
页数:9
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