Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana

Abstract Background Since 2005, the Government of Ghana and its partners, in concerted efforts to control malaria, scaled up the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). Beginning in 2011, a mass campaign of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) was im...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maru Aregawi, Keziah L. Malm, Mohammed Wahjib, Osae Kofi, Naa-Korkor Allotey, Peprah Nana Yaw, Wilmot Abba-Baffoe, Sylvester Segbaya, Felicia Owusu-Antwi, Abderahmane T. Kharchi, Ryan O. Williams, Mark Saalfeld, Nibretie Workneh, Estifanos Biru Shargie, Abdisalan M. Noor, Constance Bart-Plange
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-04-01
Series:Malaria Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-1828-6
id doaj-3d1373a4fc85409cb697d4a0f003762c
record_format Article
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maru Aregawi
Keziah L. Malm
Mohammed Wahjib
Osae Kofi
Naa-Korkor Allotey
Peprah Nana Yaw
Wilmot Abba-Baffoe
Sylvester Segbaya
Felicia Owusu-Antwi
Abderahmane T. Kharchi
Ryan O. Williams
Mark Saalfeld
Nibretie Workneh
Estifanos Biru Shargie
Abdisalan M. Noor
Constance Bart-Plange
spellingShingle Maru Aregawi
Keziah L. Malm
Mohammed Wahjib
Osae Kofi
Naa-Korkor Allotey
Peprah Nana Yaw
Wilmot Abba-Baffoe
Sylvester Segbaya
Felicia Owusu-Antwi
Abderahmane T. Kharchi
Ryan O. Williams
Mark Saalfeld
Nibretie Workneh
Estifanos Biru Shargie
Abdisalan M. Noor
Constance Bart-Plange
Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
Malaria Journal
Malaria
Impact
LLIN mass campaign
Indoor residual spraying
Ghana
author_facet Maru Aregawi
Keziah L. Malm
Mohammed Wahjib
Osae Kofi
Naa-Korkor Allotey
Peprah Nana Yaw
Wilmot Abba-Baffoe
Sylvester Segbaya
Felicia Owusu-Antwi
Abderahmane T. Kharchi
Ryan O. Williams
Mark Saalfeld
Nibretie Workneh
Estifanos Biru Shargie
Abdisalan M. Noor
Constance Bart-Plange
author_sort Maru Aregawi
title Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
title_short Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
title_full Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
title_fullStr Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, Ghana
title_sort effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, ghana
publisher BMC
series Malaria Journal
issn 1475-2875
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Background Since 2005, the Government of Ghana and its partners, in concerted efforts to control malaria, scaled up the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). Beginning in 2011, a mass campaign of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) was implemented, targeting all the population. The impact of these interventions on malaria cases, admissions and deaths was assessed using data from district hospitals. Methods Records of malaria cases and deaths and availability of ACT in 88 hospitals, as well as at district level, ITN distribution, and indoor residual spraying were reviewed. Annual proportion of the population potentially protected by ITNs was estimated with the assumption that each LLIN covered 1.8 persons for 3 years. Changes in trends of cases and deaths in 2015 were estimated by segmented log-linear regression, comparing trends in post-scale-up (2011–2015) with that of pre-scale-up (2005–2010) period. Trends of mortality in children under 5 years old from population-based household surveys were also compared with the trends observed in hospitals for the same time period. Results Among all ages, the number of outpatient malaria cases (confirmed and presumed) declined by 57% (95% confidence interval [CI], 47–66%) by first half of 2015 (during the post-scale-up) compared to the pre-scale-up (2005–2010) period. The number of microscopically confirmed cases decreased by 53% (28–69%) while microscopic testing was stable. Test positivity rate (TPR) decreased by 41% (19–57%). The change in malaria admissions was insignificant while malaria deaths fell significantly by 65% (52–75%). In children under 5 years old, total malaria outpatient cases, admissions and deaths decreased by 50% (32–63%), 46% (19–75%) and 70% (49–82%), respectively. The proportion of outpatient malaria cases, admissions and deaths of all-cause conditions in both all ages and children under five also fell significantly by >30%. Similar decreases in the main malaria indicators were observed in the three epidemiological strata (coastal, forest, savannah). All-cause admissions increased significantly in patients covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) compared to the non-insured. The non-malaria cases and non-malaria deaths increased or remained unchanged during the same period. All-cause mortality for children under 5 years old in household surveys, similar to those observed in the hospitals, declined by 43% between 2008 and 2014. Conclusions The data provide compelling evidence of impact following LLIN mass campaigns targeting all ages since 2011, while maintaining other anti-malarial interventions. Malaria cases and deaths decreased by over 50 and 65%, respectively. The declines were stronger in children under five. Test positivity rate in all ages decreased by >40%. The decrease in malaria deaths was against a backdrop of increased admissions owing to free access to hospitalization through the NHIS. The study demonstrated that retrospective health facility-based data minimize reporting biases to assess effect of interventions. Malaria control in Ghana is dependent on sustained coverage of effective interventions and strengthened surveillance is vital to monitor progress of these investments.
topic Malaria
Impact
LLIN mass campaign
Indoor residual spraying
Ghana
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-1828-6
work_keys_str_mv AT maruaregawi effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT keziahlmalm effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT mohammedwahjib effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT osaekofi effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT naakorkorallotey effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT peprahnanayaw effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT wilmotabbabaffoe effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT sylvestersegbaya effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT feliciaowusuantwi effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT abderahmanetkharchi effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT ryanowilliams effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT marksaalfeld effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT nibretieworkneh effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT estifanosbirushargie effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT abdisalanmnoor effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
AT constancebartplange effectofantimalarialinterventionsontrendsofmalariacaseshospitaladmissionsanddeaths20052015ghana
_version_ 1725996852748222464
spelling doaj-3d1373a4fc85409cb697d4a0f003762c2020-11-24T21:22:13ZengBMCMalaria Journal1475-28752017-04-0116111510.1186/s12936-017-1828-6Effect of anti-malarial interventions on trends of malaria cases, hospital admissions and deaths, 2005–2015, GhanaMaru Aregawi0Keziah L. Malm1Mohammed Wahjib2Osae Kofi3Naa-Korkor Allotey4Peprah Nana Yaw5Wilmot Abba-Baffoe6Sylvester Segbaya7Felicia Owusu-Antwi8Abderahmane T. Kharchi9Ryan O. Williams10Mark Saalfeld11Nibretie Workneh12Estifanos Biru Shargie13Abdisalan M. Noor14Constance Bart-Plange15World Health OrganizationNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthAngloGold Ashanti Malaria Control ProgrammeWorld Health Organization, WHO Country OfficeWorld Health Organization, Intercountry Support TeamWorld Health OrganizationThe Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and MalariaThe Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and MalariaThe Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and MalariaWorld Health OrganizationNational Malaria Control Programme, Ministry of HealthAbstract Background Since 2005, the Government of Ghana and its partners, in concerted efforts to control malaria, scaled up the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) and insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). Beginning in 2011, a mass campaign of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) was implemented, targeting all the population. The impact of these interventions on malaria cases, admissions and deaths was assessed using data from district hospitals. Methods Records of malaria cases and deaths and availability of ACT in 88 hospitals, as well as at district level, ITN distribution, and indoor residual spraying were reviewed. Annual proportion of the population potentially protected by ITNs was estimated with the assumption that each LLIN covered 1.8 persons for 3 years. Changes in trends of cases and deaths in 2015 were estimated by segmented log-linear regression, comparing trends in post-scale-up (2011–2015) with that of pre-scale-up (2005–2010) period. Trends of mortality in children under 5 years old from population-based household surveys were also compared with the trends observed in hospitals for the same time period. Results Among all ages, the number of outpatient malaria cases (confirmed and presumed) declined by 57% (95% confidence interval [CI], 47–66%) by first half of 2015 (during the post-scale-up) compared to the pre-scale-up (2005–2010) period. The number of microscopically confirmed cases decreased by 53% (28–69%) while microscopic testing was stable. Test positivity rate (TPR) decreased by 41% (19–57%). The change in malaria admissions was insignificant while malaria deaths fell significantly by 65% (52–75%). In children under 5 years old, total malaria outpatient cases, admissions and deaths decreased by 50% (32–63%), 46% (19–75%) and 70% (49–82%), respectively. The proportion of outpatient malaria cases, admissions and deaths of all-cause conditions in both all ages and children under five also fell significantly by >30%. Similar decreases in the main malaria indicators were observed in the three epidemiological strata (coastal, forest, savannah). All-cause admissions increased significantly in patients covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) compared to the non-insured. The non-malaria cases and non-malaria deaths increased or remained unchanged during the same period. All-cause mortality for children under 5 years old in household surveys, similar to those observed in the hospitals, declined by 43% between 2008 and 2014. Conclusions The data provide compelling evidence of impact following LLIN mass campaigns targeting all ages since 2011, while maintaining other anti-malarial interventions. Malaria cases and deaths decreased by over 50 and 65%, respectively. The declines were stronger in children under five. Test positivity rate in all ages decreased by >40%. The decrease in malaria deaths was against a backdrop of increased admissions owing to free access to hospitalization through the NHIS. The study demonstrated that retrospective health facility-based data minimize reporting biases to assess effect of interventions. Malaria control in Ghana is dependent on sustained coverage of effective interventions and strengthened surveillance is vital to monitor progress of these investments.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12936-017-1828-6MalariaImpactLLIN mass campaignIndoor residual sprayingGhana