Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria during pregnancy: a qualitative study of knowledge, attitudes and practices of district health managers, antenatal care staff and pregnant women in Korogwe District, North-Eastern Tanzania
Open Access
- 20 July 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Malaria Journal
- Vol. 4 (1) , 31
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-4-31
Abstract
Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) is a key intervention in the national strategy for malaria control in Tanzania. SP, the current drug of choice, is recommended to be administered in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy during antenatal care (ANC) visits. To allow for a proper design of planned scaling up of IPT services in Tanzania it is useful to understand the IPTp strategy's acceptability to health managers, ANC service providers and pregnant women. This study assesses the knowledge, attitudes and practices of these groups in relation to malaria control with emphasis on IPTp services. The study was conducted in February 2004, in Korogwe District, Tanzania. It involved in-depth interviews with the district medical officer (DMO), district hospital medical officer in charge and relevant health service staff at two peripheral dispensaries, and separate focus group discussions (FGDs) with district Council Health Management Team members at district level and pregnant women at dispensary and community levels. Knowledge of malaria risks during pregnancy was high among pregnant women although some women did not associate coma and convulsions with malaria. Contacting traditional healers and self-medication with local herbs for malaria management was reported to be common. Pregnant women and ANC staff were generally aware of SP as the drug recommended for IPTp, albeit some nurses and the majority of pregnant women expressed concern about the use of SP during pregnancy. Some pregnant women testified that sometimes ANC staff allow the women to swallow SP tablets at home which gives a room for some women to throw away SP tablets after leaving the clinic. The DMO was sceptical about health workers' compliance with the direct observed therapy in administering SP for IPTp due to a shortage of clean water and cups at ANC clinics. Intensified sensitization of pregnant women about the benefits of IPTp was suggested by the study participants as an important approach for improving IPTp compliance. The successful implementation of the IPTp strategy in Tanzania depends on the proper planning of, and support to, the training of health staff and sustained sensitization of pregnant women at health facility and community levels about the benefits of IPTp for the women and their unborn babies.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Where did it all go wrong?Nature, 2004
- Implementation of intermittent preventive treatment with sulphadoxine–pyrimethamine for control of malaria in pregnancy in Kisumu, western KenyaTropical Medicine & International Health, 2004
- Use of intermittent presumptive treatment and insecticide treated bed nets by pregnant women in four Kenyan districtsTropical Medicine & International Health, 2004
- Causes and characteristics of maternal deaths in rural northern TanzaniaActa Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, 2002
- Drugs for preventing malaria-related illness in pregnant women and death in the newbornPublished by Wiley ,2002
- Monitoring antimalarial drug resistance within National Malaria Control Programmes: the EANMAT experienceTropical Medicine & International Health, 2001
- Safer maternal health in rural Uttar Pradesh: do primary health services contribute?Health Policy and Planning, 2001
- Editorial: Global - national - localTropical Medicine & International Health, 2001
- Maternal and child health services in rural Nepal: does access or quality matter more?Health Policy and Planning, 2000
- Research report. The use of formal and informal services for antenatal care and malaria treatment in rural UgandaHealth Policy and Planning, 1998