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Manifestations, Quality of Emergency Care and Outcome of Severe Malaria in Mulago Hospital, Uganda
Abstract
Objective: To describe the manifestations and quality of care children with severe malaria receive in Mulago Hospital Paediatric emergency unit and evaluate its impact on outcome.
Methods: A cohort of 784 children with severe malaria was recruited at admission and followed up. Selected measures of quality were the exposure factor and death, the outcome measure.
Results: Only 22.5% of the children were brought at night. The commonest defining manifestations were severe anaemia (39.4%), respiratory distress (17.1%), multiple generalized convulsions (13.3%), hypoglycaemia (11.4%) and cerebral malaria (7.2%). Over 50% lacked an essential drug or supply needed for resuscitation and 23.4% were seen within 1 hour of arrival. Commonly lacking items were intravenous cannulae (53.1%) syringes (23.3%) and blood transfusion sets (15.0%). Children brought at night took a shorter time before being seen by a doctor (1.9 SD 2.4 vs 2.5 SD 2.0 hours, p=0.002), received the first dose of quinine earlier (4.1 SD 3.2 vs 5.2 SD 3.2 hours, p<0.0001), fewer lacked essential drugs and supplies (45% vs 57.9%, p=0.003) and fewer died (0.6% vs 3.8%, p=0.028). Children who lacked an item for resuscitation took 30 minutes longer to receive the first dose of quinine. Caretaker satisfaction was predictive of mortality in the unit.
Conclusions: Quality of care for severe malaria in Mulago paediatric emergency unit is still poor although nighttime services are comparatively better. Caretakers buy at least one resuscitation item in over 50% of cases and their level of satisfaction is predictive of mortality.
Recommendations: The unit should set targets for quality improvement to include increased staffing and supplies, a time limit within which children should be seen and measures of decongestion. Determination of blood sugar in patients with severe malaria should be made a basic requirement.
African Health Sciences Vol.4(1) 2004: 50-57