Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Health Service Providers In Somalia: Their Readiness To Provide Malaria Case-Management

Issue 381

Front Page

News Headlines

Terrorists Captured In Hargeysa

Presidential Security Eject Haatuf Reporters

American Experts Train Somaliland’s Security

Dahabshil Opens A New Building In Borama

Road Maintenance

Hollywood Beckons For Somali Pirate Negotiator
Welcome To Somaliland, The Nicer Part Of Crumbling Country

About 300 Foreigners Fighting Somali Government - UN

Local and Regional Affairs

1909 Egyptian Sirdar In Somaliland

Somalia: Al-Shabab Forcing Opposition Leader To Hand Over Weapons

Somaliland Mps In Uganda

Somaliland Court Jails 14 For Piracy

SOMALIA: Plea over water scarcity in Sool region

Pastoralists Hardest-Hit By Drought In Somaliland

Written answers From British House of Lords

Budget In Ush1.7 Trillion Financial Deficit

Qatar Super Grand Prix and Jama Karaiin’s Team Gold Victory

SRSG calls for immediate direct aid to alleviate suffering in Somalia

 Statement by France
Somalia: civilians trapped amid fighting in Mogadishu
Somalia: Amputations And Public Killings Must Stop

Somali Pirates Can Locate Ships Without Need For London Mole

Editorial

Chickens Come Home To Roost

Editor's Choice

War in Somalia: Protecting Somaliland's Peace Should Be a Priority

Features & Commentary

Why Are We Lending Money To Warmongering Kleptocrats?

Somewhere In Africa: Not All Somalias Are Created Equal

Concerned U.S. Voices Concern About The Concerning Politics In Kenya. Concern

U.S. Policy Re. Somali Pirates

Somalia: A state of failure

South Africa's "Racist" Muslims

Free-Makhtal Working Coalition Town Hall Meeting: RESOLUTION

Why Don't We Care About Sri Lanka?

Are German Anti-Pirate Forces Hampered by Bureaucrats?

Cold War Origins Of The Somalia Crisis

The Pope And Palestine: A State Of Confusion

The pirate hunters

International News

 

UK Muslim Minister Resigns to Clear Name

Anger At Obama Guantanamo Ruling

Biden insults President Obama’s dog at Syracuse

Barack Obama Faces Tense Meeting With Benjamin Netanyahu

Opinion

R.I.P Somaliland: A Little Country Killed By Charcoal

The Al-Shabab’s Misunderstanding Of Al-Shari’ah

Somalia –Afghanistan Of Africa, Hassan Dahir Aweys The Trojan Horse Of Issayas Afeworki

How Islamic Banks Manage In Business Without Charging Interest??

Africa's Expectations From President Obama

 A Letter To H.E President Jacob Zuma

Studies have highlighted the inadequacies of the public health sector in sub-Saharan African countries in providing appropriate malaria case management. The readiness of the public health sector to provide malaria case-management in Somalia, a country where there has been no functioning central government for almost two decades, was investigated.

Methods: Three districts were purposively sampled in each of the two self-declared states of Puntland and Somaliland and the south-central region of Somalia, in April-November 2007.

A survey and mapping of all public and private health service providers was undertaken. Information was recorded on services provided, types of anti-malarial drugs used and stock, numbers and qualifications of staff, sources of financial support and presence of malaria diagnostic services, new treatment guidelines and job aides for malaria case-management.

All settlements were mapped and a semi-quantitative approach was used to estimate their population size. Distances from settlements to public health services were computed.

Results: There were 45 public health facilities, 227 public health professionals, and 194 private pharmacies for approximately 0.6 million people in the three districts.

The median distance to public health facilities was 6 km. 62.3% of public health facilities prescribed the nationally recommended anti-malarial drug and 37.7% prescribed chloroquine as first-line therapy but 66.7% of public facilities did not have in stock the recommended first-line malaria therapy at the time of survey.

Diagnosis of malaria using rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) or microscopy was performed routinely in over 90% of the recommended public facilities but only 50% of these had RDT in stock at the time of survey. National treatment guidelines were available in 31.3% of public health facilities recommended by the national strategy.

Only 8.8% of the private pharmacies prescribed artesunate plus sulphadoxine/pyrimethamine, while 53.1% prescribed chloroquine as first-line therapy. 31.4% of private pharmacies also provided malaria diagnosis using RDT or microscopy.

Conclusion: Geographic access to public health sector is relatively low and there were major shortages of appropriate guidelines, anti-malarials and diagnostic tests required for appropriate malaria case management. Efforts to strengthen the readiness of the health sector in Somalia to provide malaria case management should improve availability of drugs and diagnostic kits; provide appropriate information and training; and engage and regulate the private sector to scale up malaria control.

Author: Abdisalan M Noor, Ismail A Rage, Bruno Moonen and Robert W Snow
Credits/Source: Malaria Journal 2009, 8:100

Published on: 2009-05-13

Copyright by the authors listed above - made available via BioMedCentral (Open Access).


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search