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Trop. Med. Parasitol. · Mar 1994
Treatment of malaria fever episodes among children in Malawi: results of a KAP survey.
- L Slutsker, L Chitsulo, A Macheso, and R W Steketee.
- Malaria Branch, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
- Trop. Med. Parasitol. 1994 Mar 1; 45 (1): 61-4.
AbstractCaretakers of children (< 10 years of age) were questioned about management of pediatric malarial fever episodes in a nation-wide knowledge, attitudes, and practices survey conducted in Malawi. A total of 1,531 households in 30 randomly selected clusters of 51 households each were sampled and interviewed. Overall 557 caretakers reported a fever in their child in the previous 2 weeks; 43%-judged the illness as severe. Fifty-two percent of caretakers brought their febrile children to clinic. Clinic attendance was positively correlated with young age of the child (< 4 years), severe illness, and higher socioeconomic status. Seventy-four percent of clinic attenders gave their child an antimalarial; in contrast, only 42% of those not attending clinic gave an antimalarial. Optimal therapy (administration of an antimalarial promptly and at the proper dosage) was received by only 7% of febrile children. Children taken to clinic were twice as likely to receive optimal therapy as were non-attenders. Identification of critical points in the optimal therapy algorithm and characteristics of caretakers linked with sub-optimal therapy may help malaria control programs target specific groups and health education messages to improve treatment of malaria fever episodes.
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