Monitoring health systems readiness and inpatient malaria case-management at Kenyan county hospitals

Abstract Background Change of severe malaria treatment policy from quinine to artesunate, a major malaria control advance in Africa, is compromised by scarce data to monitor policy translation into practice. In Kenya, hospital surveys were implemented to monitor health systems readiness and inpatien...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Malaria Journal
Main Authors: Dejan Zurovac, Beatrice Machini, Rebecca Kiptui, Dorothy Memusi, Beatrice Amboko, Samuel Kigen, Patricia Njiri, Ejersa Waqo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-018-2364-8
https://doaj.org/article/ffe58cb962304f63b2d14d2affb1c139
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Summary:Abstract Background Change of severe malaria treatment policy from quinine to artesunate, a major malaria control advance in Africa, is compromised by scarce data to monitor policy translation into practice. In Kenya, hospital surveys were implemented to monitor health systems readiness and inpatient malaria case-management. Methods All 47 county referral hospitals were surveyed in February and October 2016. Data collection included hospital assessments, interviews with inpatient health workers and retrospective review of patients’ admission files. Analysis included 185 and 182 health workers, and 1162 and 1224 patients admitted with suspected malaria, respectively, in all 47 hospitals. Cluster-adjusted comparisons of the performance indicators with exploratory stratifications were performed. Results Malaria microscopy was universal during both surveys. Artesunate availability increased (63.8–85.1%), while retrospective stock-outs declined (46.8–19.2%). No significant changes were observed in the coverage of artesunate trained (42.2% vs 40.7%) and supervised health workers (8.7% vs 12.8%). The knowledge about treatment policy improved (73.5–85.7%; p = 0.002) while correct artesunate dosing knowledge increased for patients < 20 kg (42.7–64.6%; p < 0.001) and > 20 kg (70.3–80.8%; p = 0.052). Most patients were tested on admission (88.6% vs 92.1%; p = 0.080) while repeated malaria testing was low (5.2% vs 8.1%; p = 0.034). Artesunate treatment for confirmed severe malaria patients significantly increased (69.9–78.7%; p = 0.030). No changes were observed in artemether–lumefantrine treatment for non-severe test positive patients (8.0% vs 8.8%; p = 0.796). Among test negative patients, increased adherence to test results was observed for non-severe (68.6–78.0%; p = 0.063) but not for severe patients (59.1–62.1%; p = 0.673). Overall quality of malaria case-management improved (48.6–56.3%; p = 0.004), both for children (54.1–61.5%; p = 0.019) and adults (43.0–51.0%; p = 0.041), and in both high (51.1–58.1%; p = ...