Cost-effective on-site screening for anaemia in pregnancy in primary care clinics
- PMID: 9254792
Cost-effective on-site screening for anaemia in pregnancy in primary care clinics
Abstract
Objective: To determine the feasibility, accuracy and cost of developing a system of on-site screening for anaemia in pregnancy in primary care clinics.
Setting: Mobile clinic team in Hlabisa health district, KwaZulu-Natal.
Methods: Four hundred and forty-nine consecutive women attending antenatal clinics were screened for anaemia (haemoglobin < 10 g/dl) using copper sulphate solution; the results were compared with true haemoglobin levels as determined by an automated analyser. Three hundred women had haemoglobin concentration estimated with a portable haemoglobinometer and results compared with those from the automated analyser.
Results: Screening with copper sulphate solution was highly sensitive (95.7%) but had low positive predictive value for anaemia (37.2%). Haemoglobin concentration estimated by haemoglobinometer correlated highly with results from the analyser (r = 0.82; P < 0.0001), and the mean difference in concentrations between the two methods was 1.1 g/dl. The average cost of screening all women with copper sulphate solution (6 cents/sample) and determining the true concentration in those screened as possibly anaemia (R2.64/sample) was 72 cents per woman. The cost of using an automated analyser was R6.20 per sample.
Conclusion: Combined use of copper sulphate solution and a haemoglobinometer is a feasible, accurate and cost-effective way of screening for and diagnosing anaemia in pregnant women, on-site, in primary care clinics.
Comment in
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Cost-effective on-site screening for anaemia in pregnancy.S Afr Med J. 1997 Aug;87(8):1024. S Afr Med J. 1997. PMID: 9323421 No abstract available.
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