Evaluation of Segmentation, Rotation, and Geographic Delivery Approaches for Deployment of Multiple First-Line Treatment (MFT) to Respond to Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Africa: A Qualitative Study in Seven Sub-Sahara Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Research Design
2.3. Respondent Selection, Sample Size and Composition
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Ethical Approval
3. Results
3.1. Awareness and Perception of Resistance to ACTs
“We also recognize the fact that this [resistance] is happening in some parts of the globe, in Asia. I also know that Rwanda is also registering some kind of resistance to ACTs”.(NMCP, Nigeria)
“They say there is resistance, but it’s just lack of maintenance of the protocol”.(CHW, Mali)
“I’ve seen some cases of resistance in patients who didn’t follow their treatment well and therefore relapsed”.(Nurse, Côte d’Ivoire)
“When the physician prescribes a drug to a patient, he or she doesn’t take the time to explain how the patient is going to take it (adherence), hence the problem of resistance”.(Pharmacist, DRC)
“Resistance only occurs when treatment is given poorly. If treatment is given well, there is no resistance”.(Nurse, DRC)
“The resurgence of resistance to malaria treatment is there. This is due to the lack of compliance with treatment in general. But personally, I haven’t seen anyone who has developed resistance”.(Nurse, Senegal)
“The molecule may not have any problem, but the administration may be bad. Or the administration is good, and the medicine is bad because it is counterfeit”.(GP, Cameroon)
3.2. Challenges to the Implementation of MFT
“Once the policy is adopted, I think the longest thing will be orientation and training of health workers”.(Nurse, Uganda)
“The decisions come to us from the national level, the regional level, and the district level, so that for each unit, for each area, there are protocols that are agreed upon”.(Pharmacist, Mali)
“Getting every health care professional to understand that this is the transition from old to new is really going to be a challenge, but making it work on the regulatory work is as challenging”.(GP, Nigeria)
“Training health workers and educating patients. For every policy we’ve tried to implement, that’s been the challenge”.(Pharmacist, Nigeria)
3.3. Perception of the Segmentation Approach
“What may be easier to apply in the field is the segmentation approach. It’s going to be less complicated since all the antimalarials will be in the field”.(GP, Côte d’Ivoire)
“As there is that segmentation of different age ranges, it means that all the time there has to be a hundred percent the availability of medicines for different age ranges, and when one age range runs out of medicines, that age range will face problems of the lack of medicines-according to the approach”.(Development partner, DRC)
“Prescribing a single combination for an age group is like prescribing a single long-term molecule to that age group”.(Nurse, Senegal)
“The problem is not the segmentation. The problem is how to be sure that each group accesses what you want them to access”.(GP, Nigeria)
“It can be a good approach because [the molecule changes] when the patient goes from one stage to another. For example in children we use this molecule, when the child become adolescent and adult, he takes a different product than when he was a child. Changing the product will mean it is more effective and can decrease the resistance”.(MD, Senegal).
3.4. Perception of the Rotation Approach
“If the efficacy of the candidate ACT begins to decrease, you remove it from the policy and within five years or ten years you can reintroduce it”.(NMCP, DRC)
“The rotation approach is better because we are not going to use a single molecule/combination for a long time and therefore no resistance”.(Nurse, Senegal)
“I don’t think there will be room for errors since it is for all age groups”.(Nurse, Uganda)
“I wouldn’t want to frequently change something that works for my community. If this particular molecule works for them, they may continue to use it beyond a year”.(CHW, Nigeria)
“It is true that we have malaria cases all year round, but we have more malaria cases in August to October. I propose to make a first medication [available] during this period, then spread it throughout the year. Then wait for a new peak next August to take a new molecule”.(Pharmacist, Senegal)
“The rotation system has to be based on a specific parameter: the climate. During the winter period, there is an upsurge of mosquitoes […] the rotational use will have to be made in relation to that”.(GP, Mali)
“An observant person can have a malaria treatment once a year or even twice at the most. If a patient has malaria in January and has a check-up 6 months later and it is positive, he can enter the new rotating wave”.(Pharmacist, Côte d’Ivoire)
“If it is necessary to make rotations, it includes that each time such a policy is changed, it is necessary to follow up on the change with a lot of resources for the population and healthcare providers to be able to effectively use the approach already put in place. The government doesn’t even have the money to pay for these medications, so, to rotate or change policies comes with a number of drawbacks”.(Academic researcher, Cameroon)
“I think it’s going to be confusing when you change too much like that”.(Nurce, DRC)
“Even once health workers are ready to adapt to it, it will create a lot of confusion for people”.(Nurse, Nigeria)
“What is feared is the supply or the fact that the two molecules are found at the same time at the level of the structures”.(GP, Senegal)
“I think it’s a better way to fight resistance, but there should be a single molecule present everywhere during the rotation period”.(GP, Côte d’Ivoire)
“The rotation approach will have related technical and management issues because if you are restricted to the rotating drug and you get a catastrophe like resistance, it will be very difficult to wait until next year to treat those cases”.(GP, Uganda)
“You don’t want to tie your neck by giving a product that won’t work for 12 months”.(GP, Cameroon)
3.5. Perception of the Geographic Approach
“I normally believe in the geographic deployment that Cameroon has adopted where there are efficacious medications in different regions”.(Academic researcher, Cameroon)
“People may say “Don’t take this antimalarial they are giving you because they are giving something different in the Southwest, it is Tinubu (the Lagos sponsor) who is sponsoring this stuff, they use it to kill us”.(GP, Nigeria)
“I think it will be difficult to convince the public of the reasons for using this in the North and that in the East. Is that segregation or what? Some drugs are more expensive than others and the public may see this as segregation”.(Pharmacist, Uganda)
“This geographic approach should not be applicable to Mali given the fluidity of the Malian population”.(GP, Mali)
“We need to do an epidemiological study to see if the same vector is not found everywhere. The geographical approach should be based on the prevalence of this type of plasmodium from one region to another”.(Pharmacist, Senegal)
“As a prescriber, I’m still against it unless the studies tell us that the plasmodium from there are not the same here. But if it is the same, you have to give the same ACTs”.(GP, Mali)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | High Burden Country | ACTs Registered for First-Line Malaria Treatment |
---|---|---|
Cameroon | Yes | AL, ASAQ, DHA-PQ, ASPYR |
DRC | Yes | AL, ASAQ |
Ivory Coast | No | AL, ASAQ, DHA-PQ, ASPYR |
Mali | Yes | AL, ASAQ, DHA-PQ, ASPYR |
Nigeria | Yes | AL, ASAQ |
Senegal | No | AL, ASAQ |
Uganda | Yes | AL, ASAQ |
Cameroon | DRC | Ivory Coast | Mali | Nigeria | Senegal | Uganda | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Central level: | ||||||||
NMCP/MoH | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 0 | 11 |
Academia/research | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 8 |
Development partners | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 13 |
End users: | ||||||||
Physicians | 7 | 7 | 7 | 12 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 54 |
Pharmacists | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 7 | 49 |
Nurses | 5 | 8 | 5 | 5 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 39 |
CHWs | 5 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 26 |
Total | 28 | 30 | 28 | 28 | 34 | 28 | 26 | 200 |
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Audibert, C.; Aspinall, A.; Tchouatieu, A.-M.; Hugo, P. Evaluation of Segmentation, Rotation, and Geographic Delivery Approaches for Deployment of Multiple First-Line Treatment (MFT) to Respond to Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Africa: A Qualitative Study in Seven Sub-Sahara Countries. Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2024, 9, 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9050093
Audibert C, Aspinall A, Tchouatieu A-M, Hugo P. Evaluation of Segmentation, Rotation, and Geographic Delivery Approaches for Deployment of Multiple First-Line Treatment (MFT) to Respond to Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Africa: A Qualitative Study in Seven Sub-Sahara Countries. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. 2024; 9(5):93. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9050093
Chicago/Turabian StyleAudibert, Celine, Adam Aspinall, Andre-Marie Tchouatieu, and Pierre Hugo. 2024. "Evaluation of Segmentation, Rotation, and Geographic Delivery Approaches for Deployment of Multiple First-Line Treatment (MFT) to Respond to Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Africa: A Qualitative Study in Seven Sub-Sahara Countries" Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 9, no. 5: 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9050093
APA StyleAudibert, C., Aspinall, A., Tchouatieu, A. -M., & Hugo, P. (2024). Evaluation of Segmentation, Rotation, and Geographic Delivery Approaches for Deployment of Multiple First-Line Treatment (MFT) to Respond to Antimalarial Drug Resistance in Africa: A Qualitative Study in Seven Sub-Sahara Countries. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 9(5), 93. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9050093