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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04839900

Proactive Community Case Management for Malaria in Zambia

A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial of Pro-active Community Case Management for Malaria in Chadiza District, Eastern Province, Zambia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10,890 (actual)
Sponsor
PATH · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

To study if a proactive strategy of weekly household visits by community health workers (CHWs) to identify people with malaria symptoms, offer diagnostic testing, and treatment for those with positive tests in Chadiza District, Eastern Province, can decrease malaria incidence and prevalence compared to conventional community case management.

Detailed description

This study will be a two arm, cluster-randomized controlled trial to determine whether year round weekly household visits by CHWs to detect and test people of all ages with fever or history of fever with RDTs (and offer diagnosis and referral or treatment of diarrhea and pneumonia for children under 5 years), and offer treatment with an ACT for those who test positive compared to standard passive iCCM by CHWs (which includes malaria case management for all ages in Zambia), is associated with a greater reduction in confirmed malaria cases and parasite prevalence over a 2-year follow-up period. Randomization will occur at the level of the CHW catchment areas. Thirty-three clusters will be enrolled in each arm for a total of 66 clusters. Primary study outcomes will be evaluated based on household-level cross-sectional surveys conducted at baseline and end-line and confirmed malaria case data collected through the health system throughout the study period. Primary objectives: 1. Assess whether year-round weekly proactive iCCM compared to passive iCCM with malaria case management for all ages reduces the prevalence of patent (by rapid diagnostic test (RDT)) and subpatent (by PCR) parasitemia detected at the household level in cross sectional household surveys. 2. Determine whether the confirmed malaria case incidence (detected by CHWs (either proactively or passively) and at health facilities) decreases over time in communities with weekly proactive iCCM compared to passive iCCM by comparing the difference in slope of confirmed malaria incidence in proactive vs routine arms using an interrupted time series analysis Secondary objectives: 1. Assess whether access to care (proportion of the population with fever in the past two weeks who received care from a qualified health provider, including community health worker), promptness of care (within 24 and 48 hours of symptoms), access to diagnostic malaria testing (proportion of the population with fever in the past two weeks who received a diagnostic test for malaria), and treatment with artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) if RDT is reported positive, is improved by proactive iCCM compared to passive iCCM 2. Describe the incidence of febrile disease, by arm, as well as the incidence of symptomatic malaria infection (febrile persons with a positive RDT), detected during proactive iCCM visits 3. Compare the incidence of malaria, by arm, detected at health facilities 4. Compare the proportion of malaria cases detected at community vs health facility, by arm 5. Determine if proactive iCCM reduces severe disease (malaria in all ages, diarrhea and pneumonia among \< 5) compared to passive iCCM identified at health facility and community level) 6. Compare level of parasite exposure in intervention and control arms using multiplex bead based assay for long, medium and short duration antibodies 7. Determine programmatic cost per additional case detected and treated at the community level with proactive iCCM 8. Describe the feasibility, challenges, and benefits of proactive iCCM from the perspective of the facility health worker, CHW, and community members 9. Describe the benefits and challenges associated with incorporating diagnosis and treatment of pneumonia and diarrhea for children under 5 years

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERProactive iCCMCHWs in the proactive iCCM intervention arm will conduct weekly visits of all households in their communities to detect children \< 5 years with diarrhea or cough, and people of all ages complaining of fever or history of fever. People with fever or history of fever in the past 48 hours, or any person with symptoms suggestive of malaria (chills, headache, muscle ache, fatigue, etc), will receive an RDT; those with positive results will be defined as confirmed malaria cases, and will receive the first line antimalarial. Any child under 5 years with diarrhea will be treated with oral rehydration solution (ORS) and zinc, and any child meeting diagnostic criteria for pneumonia will receive the first line antibiotic recommended per national iCCM policy. If the CHW does not have the indicated therapy on hand, the patient will be referred for treatment.

Timeline

Start date
2021-04-15
Primary completion
2023-06-30
Completion
2023-12-30
First posted
2021-04-09
Last updated
2024-07-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Zambia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04839900. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.