Monitoring drug effectiveness in kala-azar in Bihar, India: cost and feasibility of periodic random surveys vs. a health service-based reporting system

Malaviya, P. ; Singh, R. P. ; Singh, S. P. ; Hasker, E. ; Ostyn, B. ; Shankar, R. ; Boelaert, M. ; Sundar, S. (2011) Monitoring drug effectiveness in kala-azar in Bihar, India: cost and feasibility of periodic random surveys vs. a health service-based reporting system Tropical Medicine and International Health, 16 (9). pp. 1159-1166. ISSN 1360-2276

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Official URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2011.02803.x

Abstract

Objective: In 2009, a random survey was conducted in Muzaffarpur district to document the clinical outcomes of visceral leishmaniasis patients (VL) treated by the public health care system in 2008, to assess the effectiveness of miltefosine against VL. We analysed the operational feasibility and cost of such periodic random surveys as compared with health facility-based routine monitoring. Methods: A random sample of 150 patients was drawn from registers kept at Primary Health Care centres. Patient records were examined, and the patients were located at their residence. Patients and physicians were interviewed with the help of two specifically designed questionnaires by a team of one supervisor, one physician and one field worker. Costs incurred during this survey were properly documented, and vehicle log books maintained for analysis. Results: Hundred and 39 (76.7%) of the patients could be located. Eleven patients were not traceable. Per patient, follow-up cost was US$ 15.51 and on average 2.27 patients could be visited per team-day. Human resource involvement constituted 75% of the total cost whereas involvement of physician costs 51% of the total cost. Conclusion: A random survey to document clinical outcomes is costly and labour intensive but gives probably the most accurate information on drug effectiveness. A health service-based retrospective cohort reporting system modelled on the monitoring system developed by tuberculosis programmes could be a better alternative. Involvement of community health workers in such monitoring would offer the additional advantage of treatment supervision and support.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to John Wiley and Sons.
Keywords:Visceral Leishmaniasis; Drug Monitoring; Drug Effectiveness; Public Health System; Recording and Reporting; Supervised Treatment; Patient Follow up
ID Code:71530
Deposited On:25 Nov 2011 12:55
Last Modified:25 Nov 2011 12:55

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