Cost-saving through microscopy-based versus presumptive diagnosis of malaria in adult outpatients in Malawi.
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Vol. 73 (2), 223-7
Abstract
The cost implications of changing from a policy of presumptive diagnosis to one of microscopy-based diagnosis in the management of uncomplicated malaria in an urban hospital adult outpatient clinic in Malawi were studied. Costs were measured in three separate weeks during the rainy season. In weeks I and II all uncomplicated malaria cases were treated on the basis of a presumptive diagnosis. In week II, blood films were taken but the results were not made available and did not affect drug dispensing. In week III, antimalarial drugs were restricted to parasitaemic patients. In week I, a total of 7216 prescriptions were written and dispensed, of which 2883 (39.9%) were for antimalarial drugs. The proportion of antimalarial prescriptions fell to 1171/5556 (21.1%) in week II and 357/5377 (6.6%) in week III. We estimate annual savings from microscopy-directed treatment in this setting to be 52,000 Malawi kwacha (US$ 14,000). This represents 3% of the annual drugs budget for the hospital, and is large enough to justify a change in policy.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Usefulness of clinical case-definitions in guiding therapy for African children with malaria or pneumoniaThe Lancet, 1992
- Epidemiological basis for clinical diagnosis of childhood malaria in endemic zone in West AfricaThe Lancet, 1991
- The dynamics of drug resistance in Plasmodium falciparumPharmacology & Therapeutics, 1991
- Presumptive diagnosis of malaria results in a significant risk of mistreatment of children in urban SahelTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1991
- CLINICAL-FEATURES AND PROGNOSTIC INDICATORS IN PEDIATRIC CEREBRAL MALARIA - A STUDY OF 131 COMATOSE MALAWIAN CHILDREN1989