Receipt of antimalarials among children aged 6–59 months in Nigeria from 2010 to 2021

Olisakwe, Sandra C.; Thwing, Julie; Dionne, Jodie A.; Irvin, Ryan; Kachur, Patrick S.; Bruxvoort, Katia J.

Background
Nigeria has the highest malaria burden globally, and anti-malarials have been commonly used to treat malaria without parasitological confirmation. In 2012, Nigeria implemented rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) to reduce the use of anti-malarials for those without malaria and to increase the use of artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) for malaria treatment. This study examined changes in anti-malarial receipt among children aged 6–59 months during a 12-year period of increasing RDT availability.


Methods
A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using the Nigeria Malaria Indicator Survey (NMIS) data from 2010 (before RDT implementation in 2012), 2015, and 2021. The analysis assessed trends in prevalence of malaria by survey RDT result, and fever and anti-malarial/ACT receipt in the 2 weeks prior to the survey. A multivariable logistic regression was used to account for the complex survey design and to examine factors associated with anti-malarial receipt, stratified by survey RDT result, a proxy for recent/current malaria infection.


Results
In a nationally-representative, weighted sample of 22,802 children aged 6–59 months, fever prevalence remained stable over time, while confirmed malaria prevalence decreased from 51.2% in 2010 to 44.3% in 2015 and 38.5% in 2021 (trend test p < 0.0001). Anti-malarial use among these children decreased from 19% in 2010 to 10% in 2021 (trend test p < 0.0001), accompanied by an increase in ACT use (2% in 2010 to 8% in 2021; trend test p < 0.0001). Overall, among children who had experienced fever, 30.6% of survey RDT-positive and 36.1% of survey RDT-negative children had received anti-malarials. The proportion of anti-malarials obtained from the private sector increased from 61.8% in 2010 to 80.1% in 2021 for RDT-positive children; most of the anti-malarials received in 2021 were artemisinin-based combinations. Factors associated with anti-malarial receipt for both RDT-positive and RDT-negative children included geographic region, greater household wealth, higher maternal education, and older children.


Conclusion
From 2010 to 2021 in Nigeria, both malaria prevalence and anti-malarial treatments among children aged 6–59 months decreased, as RDT availability increased. Among children who had fever in the prior 2 weeks, anti-malarial receipt was similar between children with either positive or negative survey RDT results, indicative of persistent challenges in reducing inappropriate anti-malarials uptake.

Geographic Areas

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Also Published In

Title
Malaria Journal
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05075-x

More About This Work

Published Here
December 26, 2024

Notes

Malaria, Rapid diagnostic tests, RDT, Fever, Anti-malarial, Artemisinin-based combination therapy, ACT