An evaluation of the clinical assessments of under-five febrile children presenting to primary health facilities in rural Ghana
- PMID: 22174932
- PMCID: PMC3236777
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028944
An evaluation of the clinical assessments of under-five febrile children presenting to primary health facilities in rural Ghana
Abstract
Background: The shift to test-based management of malaria represents an important departure from established practice under the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI). The possibility of false results of tests for malaria and co-morbidity, however, make it important that guidelines in IMCI case assessment are still followed.
Methods and findings: We conducted a cross-sectional observational study to evaluate current practices in IMCI-based assessment of febrile children in 10 health centres and 5 district hospitals, with follow up of a subset of children to determine day 7-10 post-treatment clinical outcome. Clinical consultation, examination and prescribing practices were recorded using a checklist by trained non-medical observers. The facility case management of 1,983 under-five years old febrile children was observed and 593 followed up at home on days 5-10. The mean number of tasks performed from the 11 tasks expected to be done by the IMCI guidelines was 6 (SD 1.6). More than 6 tasks were performed in only 35% of children and this varied substantially between health facilities (range 3-85%). All 11 tasks were performed in only 1% of children. The most commonly performed tasks were temperature measurement (91%) and weighing (88%). Respiratory rate was checked in only 4% of children presenting with cough or difficulty in breathing. The likelihood of performing "better than average number of tasks" (>6) was higher when the consultation was done by medical assistants than doctors (O.R. = 3.16, 1.02-9.20). The number of tasks performed during assessment did not, however, influence clinical outcome (O.R. = 1.02, 0.83-1.24).
Conclusion: Facility-tailored interventions are needed to improve adherence to IMCI guidelines incorporating test-based management of malaria. Studies are needed to re-evaluate the continued validity of tasks defined in IMCI case assessment guidelines.
Conflict of interest statement
References
-
- UNICEF. State of the World's Children Report. New York: United Nations Children's Fund; 2010.
-
- Countdown Coverage Writing Group, on behalf of the Countdown to 2015 Core Group. Countdown to 2015 for maternal, newborn, and child survival: the 2008 report on tracking coverage of interventions. Lancet. 2008;371:1247–1258. - PubMed
-
- Tulloch J. Integrated approach to child health in developing countries. Lancet. 1999;354(Suppl 2):SII16–20. - PubMed
-
- WHO. Management of Childhood Illness in developing countries: Rationale for an integrated strategy. Document WHO/CHS/CAH/98.1A REV.1. Geneva: World Health Organisation; 1999.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
