Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana. / Adjei, G O; Darkwah, A K; Goka, B Q; Bart-Plange, C; Alifrangis, M L; Kurtzhals, J A L; Rodrigues, O P.

In: Ghana Medical Journal, Vol. 43, No. 3, 2009, p. 99-106.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Adjei, GO, Darkwah, AK, Goka, BQ, Bart-Plange, C, Alifrangis, ML, Kurtzhals, JAL & Rodrigues, OP 2009, 'Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana', Ghana Medical Journal, vol. 43, no. 3, pp. 99-106.

APA

Adjei, G. O., Darkwah, A. K., Goka, B. Q., Bart-Plange, C., Alifrangis, M. L., Kurtzhals, J. A. L., & Rodrigues, O. P. (2009). Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana. Ghana Medical Journal, 43(3), 99-106.

Vancouver

Adjei GO, Darkwah AK, Goka BQ, Bart-Plange C, Alifrangis ML, Kurtzhals JAL et al. Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana. Ghana Medical Journal. 2009;43(3):99-106.

Author

Adjei, G O ; Darkwah, A K ; Goka, B Q ; Bart-Plange, C ; Alifrangis, M L ; Kurtzhals, J A L ; Rodrigues, O P. / Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana. In: Ghana Medical Journal. 2009 ; Vol. 43, No. 3. pp. 99-106.

Bibtex

@article{fdf66dc014a111df803f000ea68e967b,
title = "Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: There is little information on sociocultural and contextual factors that may influence attitudes of patients to new treatments, such as artemisinin combination therapies (ACT). METHODS: Semi-structured questionnaires and focus group discussions were used to assess views of parents of children with uncomplicated malaria treated with ACT in a low socio-economic area in Accra, Ghana. RESULTS: The majority of parents reported a favourable experience, in terms of perceived i) rapidity of symptom resolution, compared to their previous experience of other therapies for childhood malaria, or ii) when their experience was compared that of parents of children treated with monotherapy. The parents of children treated with ACT were more willing to pay for the treatment, or adhere to the full treatment course. The explanations given for adherence were consistent with conventional biomedical explanations. Although care-seeking practices for childhood malaria were considered appropriate, perceived or real barriers to accessible health care were also important factors in the decision to seek treatment. Household dynamics and perceived inequities at the care-provider-patient interface were identified as having potential negative impact on care-seeking practices and adherence. CONCLUSIONS: Health education messages aimed at improving the response to childhood febrile illness should include other strategic stakeholders, such as decision-makers at the household level. The effectiveness and implementation success of the ACT policy could be enhanced by highlighting and reinforcing messages intrinsic to these regimens. Integrating the views of caretakers during the clinical encounter was validated as an empowerment tool that could aid in the appropriate responses to childhood illness.",
author = "Adjei, {G O} and Darkwah, {A K} and Goka, {B Q} and C Bart-Plange and Alifrangis, {M L} and Kurtzhals, {J A L} and Rodrigues, {O P}",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
volume = "43",
pages = "99--106",
journal = "Ghana Medical Journal",
issn = "0016-9560",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Parents' perceptions, attitudes and acceptability of treatment of childhood malaria with artemisinin combination therapies in ghana

AU - Adjei, G O

AU - Darkwah, A K

AU - Goka, B Q

AU - Bart-Plange, C

AU - Alifrangis, M L

AU - Kurtzhals, J A L

AU - Rodrigues, O P

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BACKGROUND: There is little information on sociocultural and contextual factors that may influence attitudes of patients to new treatments, such as artemisinin combination therapies (ACT). METHODS: Semi-structured questionnaires and focus group discussions were used to assess views of parents of children with uncomplicated malaria treated with ACT in a low socio-economic area in Accra, Ghana. RESULTS: The majority of parents reported a favourable experience, in terms of perceived i) rapidity of symptom resolution, compared to their previous experience of other therapies for childhood malaria, or ii) when their experience was compared that of parents of children treated with monotherapy. The parents of children treated with ACT were more willing to pay for the treatment, or adhere to the full treatment course. The explanations given for adherence were consistent with conventional biomedical explanations. Although care-seeking practices for childhood malaria were considered appropriate, perceived or real barriers to accessible health care were also important factors in the decision to seek treatment. Household dynamics and perceived inequities at the care-provider-patient interface were identified as having potential negative impact on care-seeking practices and adherence. CONCLUSIONS: Health education messages aimed at improving the response to childhood febrile illness should include other strategic stakeholders, such as decision-makers at the household level. The effectiveness and implementation success of the ACT policy could be enhanced by highlighting and reinforcing messages intrinsic to these regimens. Integrating the views of caretakers during the clinical encounter was validated as an empowerment tool that could aid in the appropriate responses to childhood illness.

AB - BACKGROUND: There is little information on sociocultural and contextual factors that may influence attitudes of patients to new treatments, such as artemisinin combination therapies (ACT). METHODS: Semi-structured questionnaires and focus group discussions were used to assess views of parents of children with uncomplicated malaria treated with ACT in a low socio-economic area in Accra, Ghana. RESULTS: The majority of parents reported a favourable experience, in terms of perceived i) rapidity of symptom resolution, compared to their previous experience of other therapies for childhood malaria, or ii) when their experience was compared that of parents of children treated with monotherapy. The parents of children treated with ACT were more willing to pay for the treatment, or adhere to the full treatment course. The explanations given for adherence were consistent with conventional biomedical explanations. Although care-seeking practices for childhood malaria were considered appropriate, perceived or real barriers to accessible health care were also important factors in the decision to seek treatment. Household dynamics and perceived inequities at the care-provider-patient interface were identified as having potential negative impact on care-seeking practices and adherence. CONCLUSIONS: Health education messages aimed at improving the response to childhood febrile illness should include other strategic stakeholders, such as decision-makers at the household level. The effectiveness and implementation success of the ACT policy could be enhanced by highlighting and reinforcing messages intrinsic to these regimens. Integrating the views of caretakers during the clinical encounter was validated as an empowerment tool that could aid in the appropriate responses to childhood illness.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20126321

VL - 43

SP - 99

EP - 106

JO - Ghana Medical Journal

JF - Ghana Medical Journal

SN - 0016-9560

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 17496441