实施妊娠期疟疾间歇预防性治疗:对前景、成就、挑战和研究议程的回顾。

Godfrey Martin Mubyazi, Pascal Magnussen, Catherine Goodman, Ib Christian Bygbjerg, Andrew Yona Kitua, Oystein Evjen Olsen, Jens Byskov, Kristian Schultz Hansen, Paul Bloch
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:建议疟疾流行的国家通过产前护理(ANC)诊所实施使用磺胺乙胺嘧啶(SP)的妊娠期疟疾间歇预防性治疗(IPTp)。有关疟疾预防的大量生物医学文献更多地侧重于在选定地区环境中开展的随机对照试验的流行病学和成本效益分析。这些研究未能阐明经济、社会心理、管理、组织和其他背景系统因素对推荐干预措施的操作有效性、依从性和覆盖面的影响。目的:回顾有关疟疾综合预防方案实施的政策进展、成就、制约因素和挑战的文献,强调其在非洲医疗保健融资、提供和吸收、资源制约和社会心理因素方面的操作可行性。结果:IPTp 在预防不必要的妊娠贫血、发病率和死亡率以及改善分娩结果方面的重要性得到了高度认可,但以下因素似乎是提供和接受 IPTp 服务的主要制约因素:接受产前护理的费用;关于怀孕的神话和其他歧视性社会文化价值观;目标用户、对 SP、疟疾和产前护理质量的看法和态度;卫生机构 SP 的供应和费用;人手不足和工作人员士气低落;关于基本产前护理服务免收用户费的政策指导方针含糊不清且不切实际;在同一诊所环境中实施 IPTp、蚊帐、艾滋病毒和梅毒筛查计划;以及关于寄生虫对 SP 产生抗药性的报道越来越多。然而,一些国家的 IPTp 剂量覆盖率显著提高,这证明 IPTp 的实施是可行的,而且比不实施要好。结论:在非洲,疟疾综合防治方案的实施条件有限。这对提高至少两剂的覆盖率和实现阿布贾目标是一个挑战。然而,我们也有机会应对现有的挑战,其中一个有用的办法就是对现有干预指南的可接受性和可行性进行评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implementing Intermittent Preventive Treatment for Malaria in Pregnancy: Review of Prospects, Achievements, Challenges and Agenda for Research.

INTRODUCTION: Implementing Intermittent Preventive Treatment for malaria in Pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) through antenatal care (ANC) clinics is recommended for malaria endemic countries. Vast biomedical literature on malaria prevention focuses more on the epidemiological and cost-effectiveness analyses of the randomised controlled trials carried out in selected geographical settings. Such studies fail to elucidate the economic, psychosocial, managerial, organization and other contextual systemic factors influencing the operational effectiveness, compliance and coverage of the recommended interventions. OBJECTIVE: To review literature on policy advances, achievements, constraints and challenges to malaria IPTp implementation, emphasising on its operational feasibility in the context of health-care financing, provision and uptake, resource constraints and psychosocial factors in Africa. RESULTS: The importance of IPTp in preventing unnecessary anaemia, morbidity and mortality in pregnancy and improving childbirth outcomes is highly acknowledged, although the following factors appear to be the main constraints to IPTp service delivery and uptake: cost of accessing ANC; myths and other discriminatory socio-cultural values on pregnancy; target users, perceptions and attitudes towards SP, malaria, and quality of ANC; supply and cost of SP at health facilities; understaffing and demoralised staff; ambiguity and impracticability of user-fee exemption policy guidelines on essential ANC services; implementing IPTp, bednets, HIV and syphilis screening programmes in the same clinic settings; and reports on increasing parasite resistant to SP. However, the noted increase in the coverage of the delivery of IPTp doses in several countries justify that IPTp implementation is possible and better than not. CONCLUSION: IPTp for malaria is implemented in constrained conditions in Africa. This is a challenge for higher coverage of at least two doses and attainment of the Abuja targets. Yet, there are opportunities for addressing the existing challenges, and one of the useful options is the evaluation of the acceptability and viability of the existing intervention guidelines.

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