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Care-seeking patterns for fatal malaria in Tanzania

Don de Savigny1,2 email, Charles Mayombana3 email, Eleuther Mwageni4 email, Honorati Masanja2,3 email, Abdulatif Minhaj4 email, Yahya Mkilindi4 email, Conrad Mbuya2,5 email, Harun Kasale2,5 email and Graham Reid1,2 email

1Tanzania Essential Health Interventions Project, P.O. Box 78487, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

2International Development Research Centre, Box 8500, Ottawa, Canada

3Ifakara Health Research and Development Centre, Box 56, Ifakara, Tanzania

4Rufiji Demographic Surveillance System, Ikwiriri, Tanzania

5Ministry of Health, Box 9083, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

author email corresponding author email

Malaria Journal 2004, 3:27doi:10.1186/1475-2875-3-27

Published: 28 July 2004

Abstract

Background

Once malaria occurs, deaths can be prevented by prompt treatment with relatively affordable and efficacious drugs. Yet this goal is elusive in Africa. The paradox of a continuing but easily preventable cause of high mortality raises important questions for policy makers concerning care-seeking and access to health systems. Although patterns of care-seeking during uncomplicated malaria episodes are well known, studies in cases of fatal malaria are rare. Care-seeking behaviours may differ between these groups.

Methods

This study documents care-seeking events in 320 children less than five years of age with fatal malaria seen between 1999 and 2001 during over 240,000 person-years of follow-up in a stable perennial malaria transmission setting in southern Tanzania. Accounts of care-seeking recorded in verbal autopsy histories were analysed to determine providers attended and the sequence of choices made as the patients' condition deteriorated.

Results

As first resort to care, 78.7% of malaria-attributable deaths used modern biomedical care in the form of antimalarial pharmaceuticals from shops or government or non-governmental heath facilities, 9.4% used initial traditional care at home or from traditional practitioners and 11.9% sought no care of any kind. There were no differences in patterns of choice by sex of the child, sex of the head of the household, socioeconomic status of the household or presence or absence of convulsions. In malaria deaths of all ages who sought care more than once, modern care was included in the first or second resort to care in 90.0% and 99.4% with and without convulsions respectively.

Conclusions

In this study of fatal malaria in southern Tanzania, biomedical care is the preferred choice of an overwhelming majority of suspected malaria cases, even those complicated by convulsions. Traditional care is no longer a significant delaying factor. To reduce mortality further will require greater emphasis on recognizing danger signs at home, prompter care-seeking, improved quality of care at health facilities and better adherence to treatment.


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