The Role of Patent Medicine Sellers in Home Management of Childhood Malaria: A Situational Analysis of Experience in Rural Nigeria
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Quarterly of Community Health Education
- Vol. 21 (3) , 271-281
- https://doi.org/10.2190/569a-xlpx-yf5c-h9hu
Abstract
Patent medicine sellers (PMS) play an important role in supplying the medication needs of the community particularly antimalaria. A situational analysis of the role of PMS in home management of malaria was carried out in four rural local government areas in Southwestern Nigeria using both cross sectional and observational study methods. The results showed that patent medicine stores constituted 76.2% of the medicine shops in the areas. The PMS provided not only drugs but also consultation services. Malaria constituted the commonest fever for which drugs were purchased. The most commonly mentioned drug best for malaria was the 4 aminoquinolone. Many (55.4%) of the PMS have received some form of training on malaria treatment. However, this was carried out in many instances (41.9%) by the shop owners to the apprentice PMS or shopkeepers. Health personnel were mentioned as trainers by only 27% of the PMS. The use of guidelines provided by PMS was infrequent and only 13.8% could produce the guideline at the time of survey. PMS would like to have more training on causes and recognition of malaria and antimalaria dosages. These topics were least taught. The rural PMS is important to the management of malaria. If quality training and supervision is provided to them, home management of malaria should improve.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- World Development Report 1993Published by World Bank ,1993
- Primary care training for patent medicine vendors in rural NigeriaSocial Science & Medicine, 1992
- Malaria in Nigeria: a revisitPathogens and Global Health, 1990