LESSONS FROM THE FIELD

 

Community-based interventions for diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory infections in Nepal

 

Interventions au niveau communautaire contre les maladies diarrhéiques et les infections respiratoires aigues au Népal

 

Intervenciones comunitarias contra las enfermedades diarreicas y las infecciones respiratorias agudas en Nepal

 

 

Madhu GhimireI, *; Yasho Vardhan PradhanII; Mahesh Kumar MaskeyIII

IDepartment of Communicable Diseases, World Health Organization Regional Office for South-East Asia, Mahatma Gandhi Marg (Ring Road), New Delhi, 110002, India
IIPolicy, Planning and International Coordination Division, Ministry of Health and Population, Government of Nepal, Kathmandu, Nepal
IIINational Health Research Council, Government of Nepal, Kathmandu, Nepal

 

 


ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Acute diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are the most common causes of child mortality worldwide. Safe, effective and inexpensive solutions are available for prevention and control, but they do not reach needy communities.
APPROACH: Interventions based on research were designed to train and engage community health volunteers (CHVs) to implement a community-based control programme in Nepal. With the advent of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI) strategy, this programme subsequently emerged as a community-based IMCI but retained its mainstream activities. We reviewed and analysed policy decisions and programme development, implementation and expansion.
LOCAL SETTING: Severe resource constraints and difficult terrain limit access to health-care facilities in many parts of Nepal.
RELEVANT CHANGES: In districts with interventions, more cases of acute diarrhoea and of ARIs (including pneumonia) were reported. The proportion of diarrhoea cases with dehydration and the proportion of ARI cases with pneumonia were significantly lower in districts with interventions. Case fatality rates due to acute diarrhoea and the proportion of severe pneumonia among ARI cases across the country showed a significant trend towards a decrease from 2004 to 2007. Nepal has succeeded in training many CHVs and is on course to meet the Millennium Development Goal for child mortality.
LESSONS LEARNT: The burden of acute diarrhoea and ARIs can be reduced by training and engaging CHVs to implement community-based case management and prevention strategies. Monitoring, supervision and logistical support are essential. Policy decisions based on evidence from national research contributed to the success of the programme.


RÉSUMÉ

PROBLÉMATIQUE: A l'échelle mondiale, les maladies diarrhéiques et les infections respiratoires aiguës (IRA) sont les causes les plus courantes de mortalité de l'enfant. Des solutions sûres, efficaces et peu onéreuses sont disponibles pour prévenir et combattre ces maladies, mais elles n'atteignent pas les communautés qui en ont besoin.
DÉMARCHE: Au Népal, des interventions ont été mises au point à partir de travaux de recherche pour former et engager des volontaires communautaires de santé en vue de mettre en œuvre un programme de lutte contre les maladies diarrhéiques et les IRA à l'échelle communautaire. Avec la mise en place de la Stratégie de prise en charge intégrée des maladies de l'enfant (PCIME), ce programme a ensuite été converti en PCIME au niveau communautaire, mais a conservé ses principales activités. Nous avons examiné et analysé les décisions politiques, ainsi que le développement, la mise en œuvre et l'élargissement de ce programme.
CONTEXTE LOCAL: De fortes contraintes financières et la difficulté du terrain limitent l'accès aux établissements de soins de santé dans de nombreuses parties du Népal.
MODIFICATIONS PERTINENTES: Dans les districts bénéficiant des interventions, davantage de cas de diarrhée aiguë et d'IRA (et notamment de pneumonie) ont été notifiés. Dans ces mêmes districts, la proportion de cas de diarrhée avec déshydratation et celle de cas d'IRA avec pneumonie étaient significativement plus basses. Sur l'ensemble du pays, les taux de létalité dus à la diarrhée aiguë et la proportion de pneumonies sévères parmi les cas d'IRA présentaient une tendance significative à la baisse entre 2004 et 2007. Le Népal a réussi à former de nombreux volontaires communautaires de santé et progresse vers la réalisation de l'Objectif du Millénaire pour le développement concernant la mortalité des enfants.
ENSEIGNEMENTS TIRÉS: La charge de diarrhées aigues et d'IRA peut être réduite en formant et en engageant des volontaires communautaires pour mettre en œuvre des stratégies de prise en charge des cas et de prévention au niveau communautaire. La surveillance, la supervision et l'appui logistique sont essentiels. Des décisions politiques fondées sur des résultats de la recherche nationale ont contribué au succès du programme.


RESUMEN

PROBLEMA: Las enfermedades diarreicas agudas y las infecciones respiratorias agudas (IRA) son las causas más comunes de mortalidad en la niñez en todo el mundo. Existen soluciones seguras, eficaces y de bajo costo para su prevención y control, pero esas soluciones no llegan a las comunidades necesitadas.
ENFOQUE: Sobre la base de investigaciones previas, se diseñaron intervenciones destinadas a capacitar y hacer participar a voluntarios de salud comunitarios (VSC) para implementar un programa de control basado en la comunidad en Nepal. Con la llegada de la Atención Integrada a las Enfermedades Prevalentes de la Infancia (AIEPI), este programa evolucionó posteriormente hacia una AIEPI basada en la comunidad, pero mantuvo sus actividades principales. Hemos revisado y analizado aquí las decisiones de política y el desarrollo, ejecución y expansión del programa.
CONTEXTO LOCAL: La grave falta de recursos y las dificultades del terreno limitan el acceso a los servicios de salud en muchas zonas de Nepal.
CAMBIOS DESTACABLES: En los distritos con intervenciones se notificaron más casos de diarrea aguda e IRA (incluida neumonía). La proporción de casos de diarrea con deshidratación y la proporción de casos de IRA con neumonía fueron significativamente menores en los distritos con intervenciones. Las tasas de letalidad por diarrea aguda y la proporción de neumonía grave entre los casos de IRA en todo el país mostraron una tendencia importante a la baja entre 2004 y 2007. Nepal ha logrado formar satisfactoriamente a muchos VSC y está bien encaminado para alcanzar el Objetivo de Desarrollo del Milenio relativo a la mortalidad infantil.
ENSEÑANZAS EXTRAÍDAS: La carga de diarrea aguda y de IRA puede reducirse mediante la formación y participación activa de VSC en la aplicación de estrategias de tratamiento y prevención de casos basadas en la comunidad. El monitoreo, la supervisión y el apoyo logístico son fundamentales. Las decisiones de política basadas en la evidencia aportada por las investigaciones nacionales contribuyeron al éxito del programa.



 

 

Introduction

Acute diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory infections (ARI), especially pneumonia, remain the leading causes of child mortality globally. They are also the leading causes of disability-adjusted life years across all age groups.1 The South-East Asia Region (http://www.who.int/about/regions/searo) of the World Health Organization (WHO) carries 30% of the global burden, and these diseases affect mostly poor and marginalized groups. Simple, safe and inexpensive interventions with proven effectiveness are now available, but low coverage has resulted in poor control of these diseases.2 This article describes a strategy that involves community health volunteers (CHVs), and that has worked in Nepal. As a result of the interventions we report here, Nepal is headed towards achieving Millennium Development Goal 4: to reduce child mortality. Our findings are relevant for countries with similar demographics and high burdens of these diseases.

 

The context

Nepal recorded high under-five mortality averaging about 170 annual deaths per 1000 in the early 1980s, and now reports 61 per 1000.3,4 WHO-supported programmes for the control of diarrhoeal diseases and respiratory infections started during the 1980s and reduced child mortality. More recently, Nepal developed innovations including a community-based programme for the control of ARI and diarrhoeal diseases. As a result, Nepal is now on course to meet Millennium Development Goal 4 despite many constraints and challenges. However, many other countries in the region that report higher disease burdens5,6 may benefit from community-based interventions similar to those used in Nepal.

 

Approach

We reviewed the evolution of relevant health policies and programmes used during the preceding 20 years, examined the processes and events that influenced these policies and evaluated the impact of community-based interventions. Our analysis was based on interviews with past and present policy-makers and programme managers and a review of the literature, annual reports and work plans of the Ministry of Health.7 To evaluate impact we analysed quantitative data from the Health Management Information System. Incidences of diarrhoea and ARI in Nepal's 75 districts were calculated with each district's under-five population according to the 2001 national census as the denominator.

 

Programme development

A community-based national programme to control diarrhoeal diseases was launched in 1982. A working group oversaw planning, budgeting, management and logistics. Strategies included promoting home-based oral rehydration therapy and case management in health facilities. In 1991, district-level planning and community mobilization were included, and strategies were expanded to include oral rehydration therapy, together with oral rehydration corners in health centres and hospitals, and case management by peripheral health workers. In addition, district health managers were involved in social mobilization, programme planning and training. Diarrhoea case management was also assisted by traditional local practitioners and drug sellers.

Research based on national data established that CHVs could be trained to correctly diagnose and categorize the severity of pneumonia, as well as to improve case management at the community level.8,9 Close monitoring, supportive supervision and proper management of logistics and supplies ensured quality of care. A working group for ARI created in 1992-1993 expanded case management of childhood pneumonia by involving women from the community who worked as volunteers. A programme to improve community-based care began with a case-control study in 1995: in two districts women volunteers participated in diagnosis and treatment, and in two other districts they participated in diagnosis and referral of cases to formal health facilities. In 1997 an evaluation supported by WHO found that the proportion of expected pneumonia cases that received correct treatment nearly doubled in the treatment group but there was no change in the referral group.10

Subsequent integration of programmes led to the establishment of a community-based ARI and diarrhoea control programme. Women - some with basic school education and some semi-literate or illiterate - are trained as CHVs by the Ministry of Health to diagnose, assess disease severity and danger signs, treat children and refer them to health facilities. This programme also provides nutritional and immunization services. Training curricula and modules based on WHO's Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy were simplified and adapted to make them interactive and suited to participation by these groups.4 The value of modifying IMCI training is being recognized by many, including WHO.11

In its first year the programme was launched in five districts, including two very remote districts with difficult terrain and access. The choice of sites for initial intervention was based on consensus between the Ministry of Health and Population, its development partners and district administrations. This approach ensured logistical support, monitoring and supervision, in contrast with IMCI programmes elsewhere, which often select facilities that can be easily accessed and equipped.12,13 In 1999, this community-based control programme merged with the newly advocated IMCI strategy and acquired a new name: "community-based IMCI". The core components and functions of the original programme, however, remained unchanged.

The programme expanded gradually to cover 48 districts by the end of 2007, with plans to cover the remaining 27 districts by the end of 2009. In districts without the programme, current facility-based care and immunization programmes continue. Similarities in the terrain and social conditions in the country's 75 districts lead us to assume that pre-intervention patterns of disease epidemiology and risk factors are similar in districts that received and did not receive interventions. This assumption, however, has not been formally tested.

 

Results

The impacts of community-based interventions were evaluated on the basis of data for 2006 and 2007, before the programme was expanded to 15 more districts. The rate of reported episodes of diarrhoea was higher in the 33 districts with community-based interventions. The 377 770 diarrhoea episodes reported in a total under-five population of 1 798 668 in districts with interventions represented 0.21 episodes per child per year. In the 42 districts without interventions, the 303 049 episodes reported in a total under-five population of 1 873 982 represented 0.16 episodes per child per year (χ² for the difference in proportions = 14 186; P < 0.01).

In districts with interventions the proportion of diarrhoea episodes with some dehydration (110 956/377 770, 29.4%) was significantly lower than in districts without interventions (107 238/303 049, 35.4%; χ² = 2820.4; P < 0.01). Likewise, the proportion of diarrhoea episodes with severe dehydration was lower in districts that received interventions (3108/377 770, 0.8%) than in those without interventions (4465/303 049, 1.5%; χ² = 646.5; P < 0.01). Between 2004 and 2007 more districts were included in the programme. During this period the proportions of diarrhoeal episodes with some dehydration or severe dehydration nationwide, as well as the national case fatality rates for acute diarrhoea, showed a significant trend towards a decrease (Table 1).

The rate of reported ARI cases was also higher in intervention districts (Table 2). In districts with interventions, 996 369 cases of ARI (55.4%) were reported in a total under-five population of 1 798 668, whereas in the 42 districts without interventions 501 990 cases (26.8%) were reported in a total under-five population of 1 873 982 (χ² = 310 971; P < 0.01). In districts with interventions, pneumonia cases reported as pneumonia and severe pneumonia numbered 282 201 (15.7%) in the under-five population, whereas districts without interventions reported 200 297 cases (10.7%) (χ² = 20 115; P < 0.01). In districts with interventions, the proportion of ARI cases reported as pneumonia (27.6%) was significantly lower than in districts without interventions (37.7%; χ² = 15 802.6; P < 0.01). The proportion of ARI cases reported as severe pneumonia was also lower in districts that received interventions (0.7%) than in non-intervention districts (2.2%; χ² = 6439.5; P < 0.01).

 

 

During the period from 2004 to 2007, the national pneumonia incidence remained unchanged at around 0.13 episodes per child per year, but the proportion of cases of ARI with pneumonia or severe pneumonia showed a significant trend towards a decrease. The ARI mortality rate remained low and did not show a trend towards a decrease (Table 1).14

If the programme were expanded to the remaining 42 districts, it could potentially detect 442 372 more cases of ARI and 97 597 more cases of pneumonia per year. This would prevent severe pneumonia in 3860 more children each year. If applied nationwide, the programme would also detect 83 486 more episodes of diarrhoea, including 8283 more episodes of diarrhoea with some dehydration and 1218 more with severe dehydration each year.

Antimicrobial resistance has not emerged in these community-based programmes.15

 

Conclusion

The experience in Nepal has shown that community members with minimal prior education can be trained and engaged in their own communities to scale up safe and effective interventions. An important factor in the success of these interventions is their integration into comprehensive community-based programmes for the prevention and control of diarrhoea and respiratory infections in children (Box 1). Engaging CHVs to implement simple strategies to manage cases of diarrhoea and ARI, along with improved nutrition and vaccine coverage, help maintain the focus on problems of national importance.

 

 

Success of the programme is ensured by simplifying and modifying the training appropriately so that it meets the needs and uses the capacities of community health workers. Scale-up is best done in a step-wise fashion based on the estimated disease burden in different districts rather than on ease of access. The scaling-up process is facilitated by piloting and monitoring. Outcomes are also improved by the simultaneous use of common human and technical resources at the community level. Supervision and logistical support are essential.

National research data are used to develop policy and are essential to identify and refine effective local tools to prevent and control health problems of national priority. This research-guided shift in emphasis - from externally advocated facility-based strategies to strategies that integrate existing community strengths - is working in Nepal and is likely to be useful in other countries as long as programmes are adapted appropriately for different local contexts.

 

Acknowledgements

We would like to dedicate this work to the persevering army of community health workers in Nepal, especially the women who work as community health volunteers.

We wish to acknowledge the encouragement and guidance received from Dr Jai P Narain, Director, Department of Communicable Diseases in the South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO) of WHO and from Prof. Narendra Kumar Arora, Executive Director, INCLEN, India. We also appreciate valuable suggestions and comments made by Dr Suzanne Westman and others at WHO-SEARO. We also thank Bruce Parnel of the Burnet Institute, Medical Research Practical Action, Melbourne, Australia, for his help with the editing of the manuscript.

Funding: The principal author is currently a WHO staff member engaged in advocacy work for the revival of an intensified and integrated control programme for acute diarrhoea and respiratory infections in the South-East Asia Region of WHO. The work described in the paper was done as part of this responsibility with contributions from the Executive Chairman of the National Health Research Council and the former Director of the Child Health Programme at the Ministry of Health and Population in Nepal.

Competing interests: None declared.

 

References

1. The global burden of disease: 2004 update. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2008.         

2. Jones G, Steketee RW, Black RE, Bhutta ZA, Morris SS, and the Bellagio Child Survival Study Group. How many child deaths can we prevent this year? CHILD SURVIVAL II. Lancet 2003;362:65-71. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13811-1 PMID:12853204        

3. Nepal, Ministry of Health and Population, New ERA, Macro International Inc. Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 2006. Kathmandu: MHP, New ERA, Macro International Inc.; 2007.         

4. BASICS II, the Most Project, The United Nations Joint Programme for HIV/AIDS. Nepal child survival case study: technical report. Arlington, VA: Basic Support for Institutionalizing Child Survival Project; 2004.         

5. Boschi-Pinto C, Velebit L, Shibuya K. Estimating child mortality due to diarrhoea in developing countries. Bull World Health Organ 2008;86:710-7. doi:10.2471/BLT.07.050054 PMID:18797647        

6. Rudan I, Boschi-Pinto C, Biloglav Z, Mulholland K, Campbell H. Epidemiology and aetiology of childhood pneumonia. Bull World Health Organ 2008;86:408-16. doi:10.2471/BLT.07.048769 PMID:18545744        

7. Nepal, Ministry of Health and Population National health policy. Kathmandu: MHP; 1991.         

8. Pandey MR, Sharma PR, Gubhaju BB, Shakya GM, Neupane RP, Gautam A, et al. Impact of a pilot acute respiratory infection (ARI) control programme in a rural community of the hill region of Nepal. Ann Trop Paediatr 1989;9:212-20. PMID:2482002        

9. Pandey MR, Daulaire NM, Starbuck ES, Houston RM, McPherson K. Reduction in total under-five mortality in western Nepal through community-based antimicrobial treatment of pneumonia. Lancet 1991;338:993-7. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(91)91847-N PMID:1681351        

10. Nepal, Ministry of Health and Population. Assessment of the ARI strengthening program. Kathmandu: MHP; 1997.         

11. Report of technical consultation on IMCI training approaches and pre-service IMCI, 19-23 November, 2007. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2007.         

12. Gwatkin DR. IMCI: What can we learn from an innovation that didn't reach the poor? Bull World Health Organ 2006;84:768. doi:10.2471/BLT.06.035006 PMID:17128350        

13. Victora CG, Huicho L, Amaral JJ, Armstrong-Schellenberg J, Manzi F, Mason E, et al. Are health interventions implemented where they are most needed? District uptake of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy in Brazil, Peru and the United Republic of Tanzania. Bull World Health Organ 2006;84:792-801. doi:10.2471/BLT.06.030502 PMID:17128359        

14. Ministry of Health and Population. Annual report 2063/64 (2006/07). Kathmandu: MHP; 2007        

15. Dawson P, Pradhan YV, Houston R, Karki S, Poudel D, Hodgins S. Lessons from the field. From research to national expansion: 20 years' experience of community-based management of childhood pneumonia in Nepal. Bull World Health Organ 2008;86:339-43. doi:10.2471/BLT.07.047688 PMID:18545735        

 

 

(Submitted: 29 May 2009 - Revised version received: 25 October 2009 - Accepted: 4 November 2009)

 

 

* Correspondence to Madhu Ghimire (e-mail:madhu_ghimire@hotmail.com)

World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
E-mail: bulletin@who.int