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The impact of introducing malaria rapid diagnostic tests on fever case management:A synthesis of ten studies from the ACT Consortium

Authors :
Frank Baiden
David Schellenberg
Anthony K. Mbonye
S. Patrick Kachur
Ismail Mayan
Katia Bruxvoort
Catherine Goodman
Heidi Hopkins
Toby Leslie
Seth Owusu-Agyei
Shunmay Yeung
Baptiste Leurent
Kristian S. Hansen
Mark Rowland
Siân E. Clarke
Clare I R Chandler
Delér Shakely
Bonnie Cundill
Anders Björkman
Lasse S Vestergaard
Mwinyi I. Msellem
Sham Lal
Debora D DiLiberto
Helen E. D. Burchett
Lindsay Mangham-Jefferies
Pascal Magnussen
Obinna Onwujekwe
Jayne Webster
Andreas Mårtensson
Kristina Elfving
Virginia Wiseman
Christopher J. M. Whitty
Evelyn K. Ansah
Sarah G. Staedke
David G. Lalloo
Source :
Bruxvoort, K J, Leurent, B, Chandler, C I R, Ansah, E K, Baiden, F, Björkman, A, Burchett, H E D, Clarke, S E, Cundill, B, DiLiberto, D D, Elfving, K, Goodman, C, Hansen, K S, Kachur, S P, Lal, S, Lalloo, D G, Leslie, T, Magnussen, P, Mangham-Jefferies, L, Mårtensson, A, Mayan, I, Mbonye, A K, Msellem, M I, Onwujekwe, O E, Owusu-Agyei, S, Rowland, M W, Shakely, D, Staedke, S G, Vestergaard, L S, Webster, J, Whitty, C J M, Wiseman, V L, Yeung, S, Schellenberg, D & Hopkins, H 2017, ' The impact of introducing malaria rapid diagnostic tests on fever case management : A synthesis of ten studies from the ACT Consortium ', American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, vol. 97, no. 4, pp. 1170-1179 . https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.16-0955, The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Since 2010, the World Health Organization has been recommending that all suspected cases of malaria be confirmed with parasite-based diagnosis before treatment. These guidelines represent a paradigm shift away from presumptive antimalarial treatment of fever. Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) are central to implementing this policy, intended to target artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACT) to patients with confirmed malaria and to improve management of patients with nonmalarial fevers. The ACT Consortium conducted ten linked studies, eight in sub-Saharan Africa and two in Afghanistan, to evaluate the impact of mRDT introduction on case management across settings that vary in malaria endemicity and healthcare provider type. This synthesis includes 562,368 outpatient encounters (study size range 2,400–432,513). mRDTs were associated with significantly lower ACT prescription (range 8–69% versus 20–100%). Prescribing did not always adhere to malaria test results; in several settings, ACTs were prescribed to more than 30% of test-negative patients or to fewer than 80% of test-positive patients. Either an antimalarial or an antibiotic was prescribed for more than 75% of patients across most settings; lower antimalarial prescription for malaria test-negative patients was partly offset by higher antibiotic prescription. Symptomatic management with antipyretics alone was prescribed for fewer than 25% of patients across all scenarios. In community health worker and private retailer settings, mRDTs increased referral of patients to other providers. This synthesis provides an overview of shifts in case management that may be expected with mRDT introduction and highlights areas of focus to improve design and implementation of future case management programs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029637
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bruxvoort, K J, Leurent, B, Chandler, C I R, Ansah, E K, Baiden, F, Björkman, A, Burchett, H E D, Clarke, S E, Cundill, B, DiLiberto, D D, Elfving, K, Goodman, C, Hansen, K S, Kachur, S P, Lal, S, Lalloo, D G, Leslie, T, Magnussen, P, Mangham-Jefferies, L, Mårtensson, A, Mayan, I, Mbonye, A K, Msellem, M I, Onwujekwe, O E, Owusu-Agyei, S, Rowland, M W, Shakely, D, Staedke, S G, Vestergaard, L S, Webster, J, Whitty, C J M, Wiseman, V L, Yeung, S, Schellenberg, D & Hopkins, H 2017, ' The impact of introducing malaria rapid diagnostic tests on fever case management : A synthesis of ten studies from the ACT Consortium ', American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, vol. 97, no. 4, pp. 1170-1179 . https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.16-0955, The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00427a0897eeae37a12519c602eeb19d