Care-seeking patterns for fatal malaria in Tanzania

被引:118
作者
de Savigny, D
Mayombana, C
Mwageni, E
Masanja, H
Minhaj, A
Mkilindi, Y
Mbuya, C
Kasale, H
Reid, G
机构
[1] Tanzania Essential Hlth Intervent Project, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
[2] Int Dev Res Ctr, Ottawa, ON, Canada
[3] Ifakara Hlth Res & Dev Ctr, Ifakara, Tanzania
[4] Rufiji Demog Surveillance Syst, Ikwiriri, Tanzania
[5] Minist Hlth, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
关键词
D O I
10.1186/1475-2875-3-27
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100401 ;
摘要
Background: Once malaria occurs, deaths can be prevented by prompt treatment with relatively affordable and efficacious drugs. Yet this goal is elusive in Africa. The paradox of a continuing but easily preventable cause of high mortality raises important questions for policy makers concerning care-seeking and access to health systems. Although patterns of care-seeking during uncomplicated malaria episodes are well known, studies in cases of fatal malaria are rare. Care-seeking behaviours may differ between these groups. Methods: This study documents care-seeking events in 320 children less than five years of age with fatal malaria seen between 1999 and 2001 during over 240,000 person-years of follow-up in a stable perennial malaria transmission setting in southern Tanzania. Accounts of care-seeking recorded in verbal autopsy histories were analysed to determine providers attended and the sequence of choices made as the patients' condition deteriorated. Results: As first resort to care, 78.7% of malaria-attributable deaths used modern biomedical care in the form of antimalarial pharmaceuticals from shops or government or non-governmental heath facilities, 9.4% used initial traditional care at home or from traditional practitioners and 11.9% sought no care of any kind. There were no differences in patterns of choice by sex of the child, sex of the head of the household, socioeconomic status of the household or presence or absence of convulsions. In malaria deaths of all ages who sought care more than once, modern care was included in the first or second resort to care in 90.0% and 99.4% with and without convulsions respectively. Conclusions: In this study of fatal malaria in southern Tanzania, biomedical care is the preferred choice of an overwhelming majority of suspected malaria cases, even those complicated by convulsions. Traditional care is no longer a significant delaying factor. To reduce mortality further will require greater emphasis on recognizing danger signs at home, prompter care-seeking, improved quality of care at health facilities and better adherence to treatment.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 51 条
  • [1] Alilio MS, 1998, EVAL PROGRAM PLANN, V21, P409
  • [2] ANKER M, 1996, INT J EPIDEMIOL
  • [3] Improving adherence to malaria treatment for children: the use of pre-packed chloroquine tablets vs. chloroquine syrup
    Ansah, EK
    Gyapong, JO
    Agyepong, IA
    Evans, DB
    [J]. TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2001, 6 (07) : 496 - 504
  • [4] Patterns of care for childhood malaria in Zambia
    Baume, C
    Helitzer, D
    Kachur, SP
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2000, 51 (10) : 1491 - 1503
  • [5] Viewpoint: Management of malaria - working with the private sector
    Brugha, R
    Chandramohan, D
    Zwi, A
    [J]. TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 1999, 4 (05) : 402 - 406
  • [6] Effect of misclassification of causes of death in verbal autopsy: can it be adjusted?
    Chandramohan, D
    Setel, P
    Quigley, M
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2001, 30 (03) : 509 - 514
  • [7] The economic burden of malaria
    Gallup, JL
    Sachs, JD
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 2001, 64 (1-2) : 85 - 96
  • [8] Care seeking during fatal childhood illnesses: Siaya District, Kenya, 1998
    Garg, R
    Omwomo, W
    Witte, JM
    Lee, LA
    Deming, MS
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2001, 91 (10) : 1611 - 1613
  • [9] Children and medicines: self-treatment of common illnesses among Luo schoolchildren in western Kenya
    Geissler, PW
    Nokes, K
    Prince, RJ
    Odhiambo, RA
    Aagaard-Hansen, J
    Ouma, JH
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2000, 50 (12) : 1771 - 1783
  • [10] Retail supply of malaria-related drugs in rural Tanzania: risks and opportunities
    Goodman, C
    Kachur, SP
    Abdulla, S
    Mwageni, E
    Nyoni, J
    Schellenberg, JA
    Mills, A
    Bloland, P
    [J]. TROPICAL MEDICINE & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH, 2004, 9 (06) : 655 - 663