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Treatments used for malaria in young Ethiopian children: a retrospective study

Treatments used for malaria in young Ethiopian children: a retrospective study
Treatments used for malaria in young Ethiopian children: a retrospective study
Background: in Ethiopia, medicinal plants have been used to treat different diseases, including malaria, for many centuries. People living in rural areas are especially noted for their use of medicinal plants as a major component of their health care. This study aimed to study treatment-seeking and prioritize plants/plant recipes as anti-malarials, in Dembia district, one of the malarious districts in Northwest Ethiopia.

Methods: parents of children aged under 5 years who had had a recent episode of fever were interviewed retrospectively about their child’s treatment and self-reported outcome. Treatments and subsequent clinical outcomes were analysed using Fisher’s exact test to elicit whether there were statistically significant correlations between them.

Results and discussion: of 447 children with malaria-like symptoms, only 30% took the recommended first-line treatment (ACT) (all of whom were cured), and 47% took chloroquine (85% cured). Ninety-nine (22.2%) had used medicinal plants as their first-choice treatment. Allium sativum (Liliaceae), Justicia schimperiana (Acanthaceae), Buddleja polystachya (Scrophulariaceae) and Phytolacca dodecondra (Phytolaccaceae) were the most frequently used. Justicia schimperiana was the one associated with the best clinical outcomes (69% self-reported cure rate). However, the difference in clinical outcomes between the plants was not statistically significant.

Conclusion: in this study, only 30% of children took the recommended first-line treatment. 22% of children with presumed malaria were first treated with herbal medicines. The most commonly used herbal medicine was garlic, but Justicia schimperiana was associated with the highest reported cure rate of the plants. Further research is warranted to investigate its anti-malarial properties.
Malaria, Ethiopia, Treatment
1475-2875
Gurmu, Abyot Endale
ebd11993-9d73-46db-9133-02a46a118cd0
Kisi, Teresa
76d2986a-7d47-459f-8138-8a0148b73089
Shibru, Habteweld
eabd7a28-22f4-4d6b-9405-c083ed3e9355
Graz, Bertrand
d4cdfda1-e7d8-4b59-b1ef-baaf0db6393c
Willcox, Merlin
dad5b622-9ac2-417d-9b2e-aad41b64ffea
Gurmu, Abyot Endale
ebd11993-9d73-46db-9133-02a46a118cd0
Kisi, Teresa
76d2986a-7d47-459f-8138-8a0148b73089
Shibru, Habteweld
eabd7a28-22f4-4d6b-9405-c083ed3e9355
Graz, Bertrand
d4cdfda1-e7d8-4b59-b1ef-baaf0db6393c
Willcox, Merlin
dad5b622-9ac2-417d-9b2e-aad41b64ffea

Gurmu, Abyot Endale, Kisi, Teresa, Shibru, Habteweld, Graz, Bertrand and Willcox, Merlin (2018) Treatments used for malaria in young Ethiopian children: a retrospective study. Malaria Journal, 17, [451]. (doi:10.1186/s12936-018-2605-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in Ethiopia, medicinal plants have been used to treat different diseases, including malaria, for many centuries. People living in rural areas are especially noted for their use of medicinal plants as a major component of their health care. This study aimed to study treatment-seeking and prioritize plants/plant recipes as anti-malarials, in Dembia district, one of the malarious districts in Northwest Ethiopia.

Methods: parents of children aged under 5 years who had had a recent episode of fever were interviewed retrospectively about their child’s treatment and self-reported outcome. Treatments and subsequent clinical outcomes were analysed using Fisher’s exact test to elicit whether there were statistically significant correlations between them.

Results and discussion: of 447 children with malaria-like symptoms, only 30% took the recommended first-line treatment (ACT) (all of whom were cured), and 47% took chloroquine (85% cured). Ninety-nine (22.2%) had used medicinal plants as their first-choice treatment. Allium sativum (Liliaceae), Justicia schimperiana (Acanthaceae), Buddleja polystachya (Scrophulariaceae) and Phytolacca dodecondra (Phytolaccaceae) were the most frequently used. Justicia schimperiana was the one associated with the best clinical outcomes (69% self-reported cure rate). However, the difference in clinical outcomes between the plants was not statistically significant.

Conclusion: in this study, only 30% of children took the recommended first-line treatment. 22% of children with presumed malaria were first treated with herbal medicines. The most commonly used herbal medicine was garlic, but Justicia schimperiana was associated with the highest reported cure rate of the plants. Further research is warranted to investigate its anti-malarial properties.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2018
Published date: 5 December 2018
Keywords: Malaria, Ethiopia, Treatment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 426784
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426784
ISSN: 1475-2875
PURE UUID: 8d1e1886-8f76-47e9-bb09-4dff63ac3006
ORCID for Merlin Willcox: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5227-3444

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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:28

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Contributors

Author: Abyot Endale Gurmu
Author: Teresa Kisi
Author: Habteweld Shibru
Author: Bertrand Graz
Author: Merlin Willcox ORCID iD

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