Integrated community case management of malaria and pneumonia increases prompt and appropriate treatment for pneumonia symptoms in children under five years in Eastern Uganda
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Date
2013
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Malaria Journal
Abstract
Efforts to improve access to treatment for common illnesses in children less than five years initially
targeted malaria alone under the home management of malaria strategy. However under this strategy, children
with other illnesses were often wrongly treated with anti-malarials. Integrated community case management of
common childhood illnesses is now recommended but its effect on promptness of appropriate pneumonia
treatment is unclear.
Objectives: To determine the effect of integrated malaria and pneumonia management on receiving prompt and
appropriate antibiotics for pneumonia symptoms and treatment outcomes as well as determine associated factors.
Methods: A follow-up study was nested within a cluster-randomized trial that compared under-five mortality in
areas where community health workers (CHWs) treated children with malaria and pneumonia (intervention areas)
and where they treated children with malaria only (control areas). Children treated by CHWs were enrolled on the
day of seeking treatment from CHWs (609 intervention, 667 control) and demographic, illness, and treatment
seeking information was collected. Further information on illness and treatment outcomes was collected on day
four. The primary outcome was prompt and appropriate antibiotics for pneumonia symptoms and the secondary
outcome was treatment outcomes on day four.
Results: Children in the intervention areas were more likely to receive prompt and appropriate antibiotics for
pneumonia symptoms compared to children in the control areas (RR = 3.51, 95%CI = 1.75-7.03). Children in the
intervention areas were also less likely to have temperature ≥37.5°C on day four (RR = 0.29, 95%CI = 0.11-0.78). The
decrease in fast breathing between day one and four was greater in the intervention (9.2%) compared to the
control areas (4.2%, p-value = 0.01).
Conclusions: Integrated community management of malaria and pneumonia increases prompt and appropriate
treatment for pneumonia symptoms and improves treatment outcomes.
Description
Keywords
CHW, ICCM, Health System Research, Prompt treatment, Appropriate treatment, Treatment outcomes, Malaria, Pneumonia, Children, CMDs
Citation
Kalyango et al.: Integrated community case management of malaria and pneumonia increases prompt and appropriate treatment for pneumonia symptoms in children under five years in Eastern Uganda. Malaria Journal 2013 12:340. doi:10.1186/1475-2875-12-340