Background Nigeria has the second highest burden of HIV in children younger than 15 years (220 000) and adolescents 10-19 years (230 000) in the world. Unfortunately, fewer than a quarter of these children and adolescents are identified and given access to treatment. Decentralisation of HIV testing services to high-yield service delivery points can facilitate identification of undiagnosed HIV-positive children and adolescents. However, decentralisation of testing services is still uncommon, partly due to existing health-care professional boundaries. We evaluated the effectiveness of task-shifting HIV testing services from specialised laboratory personnel to nurses to improve HIV case identification in paediatric and adolescent clients. Methods We established a testing point for patients aged 0-19 years in the inpatient ward at a secondary health-care facility in a rural district with high prevalence of HIV in north-central Nigeria. Paediatric nurses were trained by laboratory personnel to provide HIV testing to children and adolescents admitted to the ward. We reviewed the hospital ward admission records and laboratory HIV testing records for patients aged 0-19 years to establish a pre-intervention baseline. Findings In the 3 months before the intervention when HIV testing services were provided only by laboratory personnel, 276 children and adolescents were admitted (mean 92•0 admissions/month), of whom only 22 patients (8%) underwent HIV testing and no positive cases were identified. However, in the 4-month intervention period between April and July, 2018, 179 paediatric or adolescent clients were admitted (44•8 admissions/month), of whom 169 (94%) were tested for HIV by nurses and four HIV-positive children were newly identified (a 2•4% yield). Linkage to care and antiretroviral therapy initiation was achieved for all newly identified children within 24 h of diagnosis. Interpretation Task-shifting of paediatric and adolescent inpatient HIV-testing services to nurses was more effective in HIV case identification than was testing by laboratory personnel. In settings where limited human resources remains a major challenge, implementation and scale-up of task shifting for testing services can significantly improve HIV case identification and, therefore, treatment coverage in children and adolescents. Funding CDC-PEPFAR.
Background Isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) significantly reduces the incidence of active tuberculosis in people living with HIV. However, despite high tuberculosis morbidity and mortality in people living with HIV, uptake of IPT remains grossly suboptimal, with implementation impeded by several barriers related to health workers and patients. We evaluated the use of a quality improvement approach to improve IPT in a tertiary hospital in north central Nigeria with a high HIV burden. Methods In July, 2018, a 4-week quality improvement pilot project was undertaken at the Federal Medical Centre in Keffi, Nigeria. The facility-based continuous quality-improvement committee, comprised of different cadres of staff working in the hospital's antiretroviral therapy clinic, reviewed their HIV quality-of-care indicators and noted that only 3% of eligible HIV clients received IPT between September, 2017, and March, 2018. The committee did a root cause analysis and identified poor knowledge of clinicians on the importance of IPT, fear of drug resistance, frequent stock-outs of isoniazid, and poor medication adherence as the key reasons for low rates of IPT. In response to these findings, the following key change ideas were implemented: IPT orientation for clinicians, incorporation of IPT education into routine health education for people living with HIV, display of IPT information education and communication materials in consulting and patient waiting rooms, and auditing of clients' folders prior to consultation to identify and tag eligible folders with IPT sticky notes.
Malaria remains a major cause of mortality across the world, but particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. WHOsponsored World Malaria Day activity has helped to improve education and has contributed to a reduction in mortality globally in the past decade. However, much needs to be done still in Africa. We report on a World Malaria Day scheme in three primary Healthcare Facilities in and around the Abuja Federal Capital Territory in Nigeria in 2017. Activity included educational talks to pregnant women and nursing mothers of young children, with malarial testing, distribution of free mosquito nets and also medical treatment if needed. We found a large clinical over-diagnosis of malaria with simple fevers of any cause being reported as malaria. None of these cases were found to be due to malaria on formal malarial testing. We conclude that efforts should continue into education and prevention of malaria with insecticide-impregnated mosquito nets a key factor. However, over-diagnosis of malaria and the use of unnecessary antimalarial treatment may lead to parasite resistance to antimalarial treatment, morbidity from drug side-effects and potential mortality from not receiving the right treatment for other febrile illnesses. We recommend that malarial testing, particularly with simple blood film microscopy is implemented more widely across Africa, as it is simple to perform and allows effective management plans to be drawn up for individual patients.
Malaria remains a major cause of mortality across the world, but particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. WHO-sponsored World Malaria Day activity has helped to improve education and has contributed to a reduction in mortality globally in the past decade. However, much needs to be done still in Africa. We report on a World Malaria Day scheme in three primary Healthcare Facilities in and around the Abuja Federal Capital Territory in Nigeria in 2017. Activity included educational talks to pregnant women and nursing mothers of young children, with malarial testing, distribution of free mosquito nets and also medical treatment if needed. We found a large clinical over-diagnosis of malaria with simple fevers of any cause being reported as malaria. None of these cases were found to be due to malaria on formal malarial testing. We conclude that efforts should continue into education and prevention of malaria with insecticide-impregnated mosquito nets a key factor. However, over-diagnosis of malaria and the use of unnecessary antimalarial treatment may lead to parasite resistance to antimalarial treatment, morbidity from drug side-effects and potential mortality from not receiving the right treatment for other febrile illnesses. We recommend that malarial testing, particularly with simple blood film microscopy is implemented more widely across Africa, as it is simple to perform and allows effective management plans to be drawn up for individual patients.
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