Evaluating the impact of two training interventions to improve diagnosis and case-management of malaria and pneumonia in Uganda

We present an age-structured mathematical model of malaria and pneumonia to study the effect of two capacity-building interventions: Integrated Management of Infectious Diseases (IMID) and On-site Support Services (OSS). IMID leads to a reduction in malaria prevalence by more than 2·4% across the [0...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemiology and infection 2017-01, Vol.145 (1), p.194-207
Hauptverfasser: SSEBULIBA, D. M., OUIFKI, R., PRETORIUS, C., BURNETT, S. M., MBONYE, M. K., NAIKOBA, S., WILLIS, K., WEAVER, M. R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present an age-structured mathematical model of malaria and pneumonia to study the effect of two capacity-building interventions: Integrated Management of Infectious Diseases (IMID) and On-site Support Services (OSS). IMID leads to a reduction in malaria prevalence by more than 2·4% across the [0,5), [5,14) and [14,50) age groups. IMID + OSS reduces it by more than 16·0% across all age groups. IMID decreases pneumonia prevalence by more than 3·0% across all age groups while IMID + OSS decreases it by more than 1·0% across all age groups. The number of malaria and pneumonia deaths is reduced by 7·8% by IMID across all age groups and IMID + OSS decreases this number by 30·5% across all age groups, which translates to saving a life of a child per month. Prevalence of malaria-pneumonia for the [0,5) age group is 0·52% at baseline, and IMID and IMID + OSS reduce it by 6·6% and 23·6%, respectively. There is no change in incidence of malaria or pneumonia disease episodes. The results also indicate that triaging of children contributes more than 50% to the effect of the interventions in reduction of deaths and a range of 14–91% in reduction of disease cases.
ISSN:0950-2688
1469-4409
DOI:10.1017/S0950268816002107