Malaria treatment policies: the challenge, strategies and the options SOTA, Nairobi, Kenya 12 th June 2002.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
UNDP RBA MDG-Based National Planning Workshop
Advertisements

An operational package for Integrated Management of HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care ICASA - Abuja, Nigeria 5 December 2005.
Contribution of Economics to Operational Research for Evaluation of Scaling Up Access to HIV Care & Treatment in Developing Countries Presentation by Pr.
Involving all health care providers in collaborative TB/HIV activities Eva Nathanson PPM subgroup meeting Cairo, Egypt, 3-5 June 2008.
Malaria treatment (Current WHO recommendations & guidelines)
Private Sector Malaria Case Management: Experience from 7 years of implementation in Cambodia Presented by Dr. Socheat, Director of CNM RBM Working Group.
National Malaria Centre of Cambodia Rational Pharmaceutical Management Plus Program World Health Organization European Commission Cambodian Malaria Control.
APPMG World Malaria Day Event, 2013 Invest in The Future: Defeat Malaria Kolawole Maxwell, Malaria Consortium Nigeria Country Director.
RBM Case Management Working Group Meeting, Geneva 8-9 th July |1 | Dr Wilson Were CAH/CIS Community Case Management of Malaria Child Adolescent.
Caroline Lynch & Jim Tulloch June 2014 Synthesis of current evidence on the multiple causes of malaria drug resistance.
Challenges & responses for malaria in Asia
Global high-level subsidy for ACT procurement to facilitate low-cost commercial, & other, distribution (allowing effective, affordable home treatment or.
RBM Case Management Group, 09 June |1 | Dr P. Ringwald Global Malaria Programme Monitoring antimalarial drug efficacy and resistance: challenges.
Country report-Tanzania Presented to EARN Annual Malaria Conference Kigali, Rwanda 15th –19 th November, 2004 NMCP.
World Health Organization
Module 7: Malaria and HIV/AIDS Palliative Care for People Living with HIV/AIDS.
Choice of antimalarial drugs Malaria Medicines & Supplies Services RBM Partnership Secretariat.
Possible solution: Change testing & care for patients in TB treatment Old system TB patient treated at TB center Referred to VCT center for HIV testing.
9/11 “The Malaria epidemic is like loading up seven Boeing 747 airplanes each day then deliberately crashing them into Mt Kilamanjaro” Chairman Malaria.
Access to Medicines: Antimalarials WHO/UNICEF Technical Briefing Seminar 10 October 2007 Silvia Schwarte Supply Chain Management Global Malaria Programme.
Cost Analysis of Management of Malaria Using ACT in the Private Sector of Zimbabwe: a Regulatory Implication Travor Mabugu BPharm (HONS), MSc, MPS School.
| ICIUM2011 MALARIA/TB PANEL DISCUSSION 17 NOVEMBER 2011 DR HODA Y. ATTA Scaling up community management of malaria - challenges and successes in EMRO.
Working with communities to tackle malaria in Uganda HENRY TITO OKWALINGA PROJECT OFFICER, MALARIA, AMREF UGANDA.
How to determine medicines benefits policy and program needs?
MALARIA TRACK SESSION SUMMARIES_ICIUM 2011 TEAM MEMBERS: EVELYN ANSAH, KOJO YEBOAH-ANTWI, CHARLES EZENDUKA, DAVID OFORI-ADJEI.
FHI’s Global ART Program: Today's snapshot and tomorrow's vision 10 August 2010 Kwasi Torpey, MD, PhD, MPH Regional Senior Technical Advisor, FHI 8 th.
RBM/IMCI JOINT TASK FORCES MEETING, SEPT 24-26/2002 HARARE ZIMBABWE. SCALING-UP HOME BASED MANAGEMENT OF FEVERS (HBM) PRESENTED BY Dr. CHRISTOPHER KIGONGO.
Planning and implementation of Family Planning. objectives By the end of this session, students will be able to: Discuss global goals. Analyze global.
Roadmap Progress Report 2011 Zambia SARN-RBM PARTNERS ANNUAL CONSULTATIVE MEETING, JULY 2011.
Models of Care for Paediatric HIV Miriam Chipimo MD MPH Reproductive Health & HIV&AIDS Manager, UNICEF, Malawi.
Pharmaceutical system strengthening – Is there a need for a new paradigm? Andreas Seiter The World Bank ICIUM 2011, Antalya 1.
Malaria Case management KPA conference. Presentation outline  Introduction  National malaria strategy  Case management targets  AMFm subsidy  The.
Lives at Risk: Malaria in pregnancy
Roll Back Malaria: Why it has far failed? What should be done? Dr A Kochi Director, Global Malaria Programme WHO/Geneva.
Malaria--Background Occurs in > 90 countries million cases a year 2 million deaths a year –>90% deaths in sub-Saharan Africa –Most deaths in children.
1 Oct 2005 WHO/STB/THD World Health Organization 4 th Meeting of Subgroup on laboratory capacity strengthening Paris, France, October Ernesto Jaramillo.
Access to Artemisinin-Based Antimalarial Products Dr Clive O Ondari Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy Dept & Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Department World.
1 IASC Weekly meeting Geneva, 14 September 2005 Malaria control in emergency settings Charles Delacollette WHO/Roll Back Malaria Department.
Containment of artemisinin resistance at the Cambodia-Thailand border Sylvia Meek, Technical Director, Malaria Consortium, CMWG Meeting 8 July 2009.
Social Pharmacy Lecture no. 6 Rational use of drugs Dr. Padma GM Rao
Current National Drug Policies in Lao P.D.R. By Dr Samlane Phompida Centre of Malariology, Parasitology & Entomology.
The Economic Rationale for the ACT Subsidy Kenneth J. Arrow Amsterdam 18 January 2007.
Health Organization The Challenges Facing Tuberculosis Control Blantyre Hospital, Malawi: TB Division, 3 patients per bed.
Issues in malaria diagnosis and treatment May 31, 2007 Jacek Skarbinski, MD Malaria Branch Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
WHO PMTCT ARV Guidelines 2012 Programmatic Update EFV During Pregnancy Nathan Shaffer PMTCT Technical Lead, WHO IATT Webinar 11 July, 2012.
TB Management: A Medical Aid Perspective presented by Dr Noluthando Nematswerani.
WHO/Roll Back Malaria – 3 May Forecast of ACT needs based on current and expected changes in antimalarial treatment policies Procurement, Quality.
Quantification of Antimalarials PSM Workshop Nairobi, Kenya February 21, 2006.
INDEPTH Network Effectiveness and Safety Studies Platform (INESS) Update-INDEPTH AGM 2010 Aziza Mwisongo INESS secretariat Sep, 2010.
Group B Comparison of the different types of programs.
Health seeking for malaria before and after the implementation of a community-based health worker strategy: Implications for providing timely and appropriate.
Change in malaria treatment policy: A study of its immediate effects on hospital malaria drug management, utilization of hospital facilities and prescription.
WHO Medicines Strategy Progress: Priorities: Dr Guitelle Baghdadi Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy World Health Organization November.
World Vision Experiences in Making ART Treatment Affordable and Available Dr. Daniel J Malleboyina M.B.B.S, MBA, MPH Regional Advisor HIV & AIDS- Asia.
Implementing operational research for HIV treatment scale-up in resource-limited settings TB/HIV Research Priorities in Resource-Limited Settings Expert.
RECENT ADVANCES IN PROVISION OF PRIMARY HEALTH CARE BY MISSION ORGANIZATIONS THE EFFECT OF AN EDUCATIONAL INTERVENTION ON USE OF ANTIBIOTICS IN THE TREATMENT.
Investigating Competition & Regulation in the Retail Market for Malaria Treatment in Rural Tanzania Goodman C 1, Kachur SP 2,3, Abdulla S 2, Bloland P.
Making the Case for DBC Frameworks CSHGP Partner’s Meeting October 12 th, 2011 Save the Children.
Jaran Eriksen MD, PhD Student International Health (IHCAR) & Clinical Pharmacology Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Points of Agreement Artemisinins should be the mainstay of first-line treatment in the short-to-medium term, at least First-line treatment for uncomplicated.
Every day. In times of crisis. For our future. Dr. Kechi Achebe, Senior Director HIV/AIDS & TB Integrated Community Case Management - One Opportunity for.
Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention: WHO Policy and Perspectives
Access to Antimalarial Medicines EDM-RBM Collaboration
Change in malaria treatment policy: A study of its immediate effects on hospital malaria drug management, utilization of hospital facilities and prescription.
Access to Antimalarial Medicines
Access to Artemisinin-based Antimalarial Medicines
Problems of Irrational Drug Use
Problems of Irrational Drug Use
WHO Community drug use practices in malaria in Cambodia: a cross-sectional study National Malaria Centre of Cambodia Rational Pharmaceutical Management.
HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) PREVENTION & CARE
Presentation transcript:

Malaria treatment policies: the challenge, strategies and the options SOTA, Nairobi, Kenya 12 th June 2002

Global Malaria Control Strategy Early diagnosis and effective treatment of malaria illness

Some factors preventing effective case management Failure to recognize malaria Failure to recognize signs of severe malaria Use of inappropriate or inadequate courses of treatment Poor adherence to tx guidelines at health facility level Poor adherence at the household level Poor availability and access to drugs Use of poor quality drugs Use of ineffective drugs due to drug resistance

Challenges to antimalarial drug policy Widespread resistance to common antimalarials e.g. chloroquine Mounting resistance to replacement therapies e.g. sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) New therapies are more expensive and have more complicated treatment regimens Availability of poor quality or substandard drugs Home treatment; private sector more difficult to control

Challenges to antimalarial drug policy [2] Equitable access to reduce mortality and morbidity Emphasis on community management Reduces development of resistance Emphasis on regulation and controlled use AccessRational Use

Changing national treatment policies Need a rational approach for decision making for: When to change national first line treatment –AFRO guidelines: ›15-25% drug resistance alert phase ›≥ 25% drug resistance is action phase “Evidence” for changing policy ~Drug resistance and monitoring ~Attitudes and practices ~Behaviors

Efficacy vs. effectiveness Program effectiveness: Drug efficacy Drug use determinants ~Availability ~Affordability ~Acceptability ~Compliance –Frequency and total number of doses –Adverse effects and acceptability –Ability of users and mothers to follow directions

Efficacy vs. effectiveness e.g. SP Parasite clearance=80% Availability=90% Affordability=100% Compliance=100% (single dose/DOT)

Efficacy vs. effectiveness e.g. SP

Efficacy vs. effectiveness e.g. Artesunate/SP Parasite clearance=99% Availability=50% Affordability=50% Compliance=50%

Efficacy vs. effectiveness e.g. Artesunate/SP

Changing national treatment protocols: Factors to consider Efficacy and safety Adverse effects Compliance (ease of use, acceptability, formulation) Cost Ability to curb resistance development Ability to reduce transmission (gametocytocidal) Useful therapeutic life Use in young children and pregnant women

Changing national treatment protocols: Other factors to consider Biological vs. clinical diagnosis Quality Rational use Reduce availability/demand of undesired product Role of regulation ~Regulate undesirable drugs ~Decrease availability

Changing national treatment protocols Other factors to consider Financial burden for change ~Direct cost: more expensive drugs ~Indirect cost: retraining of HW, new STGs etc. Capacity of health system to implement policy Provision for Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPT) for pregnant women Home management Engage the private sector (franchising, subsidies, social marketing, incentives)

Options for replacement therapies Continue using SP until it is no longer effective (potential of compromising the use of other antifolates under development) Amodiaquine monotherapy (cross-resistance with CQ) Mefloquine, Malarone etc. but, not without problems Combination therapy but not without consideration to issues

Artemisinin based combination therapy Advantages of ACT: High efficacy and rapid clearance of parasites Experience in SE Asia shown to slow down the development of resistance Artemisinin reduces gametocyte carriage thus reduces malaria transmission

Issues concerning use of ACT Limited experience in Africa Lack of safety data in pregnant women Higher cost Need for better diagnosis Compliance, packaging Issues of misuse due to role in severe malaria All monotherapies must be replaced with CT Public vs Private sector Which combinations?

Cost comparison of adult tx courses of available new combinations in relation to selected monotherapies

Cost Incremental cost of AQ+AS rather than AQ+SP: US$1.10 per patient Tanzania: 16 million cases annually Increased cost of US$17.6 million (annually) Total annual government expenditure on health: US$ 5.5 per capita (malaria: US$ 0.42 per capita)

Lessons learned Need for documentation of lessons learned and a framework for a rational approach to drug policies and implementation Examples: ~Malawi: Difficulties in implementation ~Kenya: SP deregulation ~Zambia: Cost of combination therapy ~Uganda: CQ + SP (pre-packaging etc.)

Malaria Action Coalition USAID mechanism for focusing funds towards an integrated work plan Goal: The attainment of the Abuja goals for the treatment of malaria and the control of malaria during pregnancy Partners: WHO/CDC/MNH/RPM Plus Funds channeled to partners through field support and “core” funds to provide support to address these programmatic challenges of antimalarial drug policy development and implementation