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Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2002

High death rates in health care workers and teachers in Malawi

Anthony D. Harries; N.J. Hargreaves; Gausi F; J. Kwanjana; Salaniponi Fm

High death rates are reported in health care workers (HCWs) and teachers in urban areas of Malawi. The present study was carried out to determine the annual death rate in HCWs and primary school teachers working in semi-urban and rural areas of Malawi, and to try to ascertain the main causes of death. Forty district and mission hospitals in Malawi were visited. A record was made of the number of clinical and nursing-based HCWs in each hospital in 1999, the number of deaths in that calendar year and reported causes of death. A record was also made of the number of teachers working in 4 primary schools nearest to each hospital in 1999, the number of deaths in that calendar year and reported causes of death. There were 2979 HCWs, of whom 60 (2.0%) died. There were 4367 teachers of whom 101 (2.3%) died. Annual death rates, calculated per 100,000 people, were significantly higher in male HCWs compared with female HCWs (2495 versus 1770, RR 1.17, 95% CI 1.14-1.20, P < 0.001), and significantly higher in female teachers compared with male teachers (2521 versus 1934, RR 1.14, 95% CI 1.11-1.17, P < 0.001). In male HCWs and teachers the highest death rates were in those aged 35-44 years. In female HCWs and teachers, the highest death rates were in those aged 25-34 years and 35-44 years, respectively. Reported causes of death in HCWs were tuberculosis (TB) in 47%, chronic illness in 45% and acute illness in the remainder, while in teachers the causes were TB in 27%, chronic illness in 49% and acute illness in 25%. Chronic illness, thought to be due to AIDS, and TB were the common causes of death. The current high death rates from AIDS and TB will have a crippling toll on the health and education sectors, and effective ways of reducing these death rates must be found.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2002

Preventing tuberculosis among health workers in Malawi

Anthony D. Harries; N.J. Hargreaves; Gausi F; J. Kwanjana; Salaniponi Fm

OBJECTIVE Following the introduction of guidelines for the control of tuberculosis (TB) infection in all hospitals in Malawi, a study was carried out to determine whether the guidelines were being implemented, the time between admission to hospital and the diagnosis of pulmonary TB had been reduced, and the annual case notification rates among health workers had fallen and were comparable to those of primary-school teachers. METHODS The study involved 40 district and mission hospitals. Staff and patients were interviewed in order to determine whether the guidelines had been adopted. In four hospitals the diagnostic process in patients with smear-positive pulmonary TB was evaluated before and after the introduction of the guidelines, with the aid of case notes and TB registers. In all hospitals the proportion of health workers registered with TB before and after the guidelines were introduced, in 1996 and 1999, respectively, was determined by conducting interviews and consulting staff lists and TB registers. A similar method was used to determine the proportion of primary-school teachers who were registered with TB in 1999. FINDINGS The guidelines were not uniformly implemented. Only one hospital introduced voluntary counselling and testing for its staff. Most hospitals stated that they used rapid systems to diagnose pulmonary TB. However, there was no significant change in the interval between admission and diagnosis or between admission and treatment of patients with smear-positive pulmonary TB. The TB case notification rate for 2979 health workers in 1999 was 3.2%; this did not differ significantly from the value of 3.7% for 2697 health workers in 1996 but was significantly higher than that of 1.8% for 4367 primary-school teachers in 1999. CONCLUSION The introduction of guidelines for the control of TB infection is an important intervention for reducing nosocomial transmission of the disease, but rigorous monitoring and follow-up are needed in order to ensure that they are implemented.


International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2011

Reduced tuberculosis case notification associated with scaling up antiretroviral treatment in rural Malawi

Rony Zachariah; Marielle Bemelmans; Ann Åkesson; P. Gomani; K. Phiri; B. Isake; T. Van den Akker; Mit Philips; A. Mwale; Gausi F; J. Kwanjana; Anthony D. Harries

OBJECTIVE To report on the trends in new and recurrent tuberculosis (TB) case notifications in a rural district of Malawi that has embarked on large-scale roll-out of antiretroviral treatment (ART). METHODS Descriptive study analysing TB case notification and ART enrolment data between 2002 and 2009. RESULTS There were a total of 10,070 new and 755 recurrent TB cases. ART scale-up started in 2003, and by 2007 an estimated 80% ART coverage had been achieved and was sustained thereafter. For new TB cases, an initial increase in case notifications in the first years after starting ART (2002-2005) was followed by a highly significant and sustained decline from 259 to 173 TB cases per 100,000 population (χ(2) for trend 261, P < 0.001, cumulative reduction for 2005-2009 = 33%, 95%CI 27-39). For recurrent TB, the initial increase was followed by a significant drop, from 20 to 15 cases/100,000 (χ(2) for linear trend = 8.3, P = 0.004, constituting a 25% (95%CI 9-49) cumulative reduction between 2006 and 2009. From 2005 to 2009, ART averted an estimated 1164 (95%CI 847-1480) new TB cases and 78 (95%CI 23-151) recurrent TB cases. CONCLUSIONS High ART implementation coverage is associated with a very significant declining trend in new and recurrent TB case notifications at population level.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2001

Resources for controlling tuberculosis in Malawi

Anthony D. Harries; J. Kwanjana; N.J. Hargreaves; Jeroen van Gorkom; Felix M Salaniponi

OBJECTIVE To document resources for controlling tuberculosis (TB) in Malawi. METHODS We performed a countrywide study of all 43 hospitals (3 central, 22 district and 18 mission) which register and treat patients with TB. To collect data for 1998 on the TB-related workload, diagnostic facilities, programme staff and treatment facilities, we used laboratory, radiographic and TB registers, conducted interviews and visited hospital facilities. FINDINGS The data show that in 1998, 88,257 TB suspects/patients contributed approximately 230,000 sputum specimens for smear microscopy, 55,667 chest X-rays were performed and 23,285 patients were registered for TB treatment. There were 86 trained laboratory personnel, 44 radiographers and 83 TB programme staff. Of these, about 40% had periods of illness during 1998. Approximately 20% of the microscopes and X-ray machines were broken. Some 16% of the hospital beds were designated for TB patients in special wards, but even so, the occupancy of beds in TB wards exceeded 100%. Although stocks of anti-TB drugs were good, there was a shortage of full-time TB ward nurses and 50% of district hospitals conducted no TB ward rounds. In general, there was a shortage of facilities for managing associated HIV-related disease; central hospitals, in particular, were underresourced. CONCLUSION Malawi needs better planning to utilize its manpower and should consider cross-training hospital personnel. The equipment needs regular maintenance, and more attention should be paid to HIV-related illness. The policies of decentralizing resources to the periphery and increasing diagnostic and case-holding resources for central hospitals should be continued.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2000

Sputum-smear examination in patients with extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Malawi

J. Kwanjana; Anthony D. Harries; N.J. Hargreaves; J. Van Gorkom; T. Ringdal; Salaniponi Fm

In Malawi, it has been the practice for several years to obtain sputum for smear microscopy of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) from all patients with extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB). We audited this practice, and determined in patients aged > or = 15 years (i) the proportion of EPTB patients who had sputum smears examined, (ii) the number of sputum smears examined per patient, and (iii) the proportion of patients with EPTB who had sputum samples smear positive for AFB. Forty-one hospitals (3 central, 22 district and 16 mission) performing smear microscopy and registering EPTB patients were visited in 1998 and 1999, and a retrospective and prospective study was carried out using TB registers and laboratory sputum registers. In the retrospective study, 1124 (69%) of the 1637 patients with EPTB had sputum smears examined; 988 (88%) of the 1124 submitted 3 sputum specimens. In the prospective study, 2026 (84%) of the 2411 patients with EPTB had sputum smears examined: 94% of the 2026 submitted 3 sputum specimens. In both studies, high rates of sputum submission were found in patients with pleural effusion, miliary TB, lymphadenopathy and pericardial effusion. In the prospective study, only 34 (1.7%) EPTB patients submitting sputum were smear positive, and the proportion who were smear positive exceeded 3% only in patients with lymphadenopathy, miliary TB and TB meningitis. As a result of this study, the Malawi TB Control Programme has changed its policy, and now only insists on sputum-smear examination if patients with EPTB have a cough for > 3 weeks. These policy changes will be audited by further operational research.


The Lancet | 2006

Managing HIV and tuberculosis in sub-Saharan Africa

Anthony D. Harries; Matt Boxshall; Sam Phiri; J. Kwanjana

The Review by Liz Corbett and colleagues makes the indisputable case for improved coordination between HIV antiretroviral programmes and tuberculosis programmes in sub-Saharan Africa. We offer four simple steps to improving such coordination. First HIV parameters must be embedded in cohort reporting of tuberculosis programmes meaning that they must be highly visible in the register and patient master cards the two essential monitoring tools from which data are extracted for cohort analysis. There is ample room in the tuberculosis register for four additional columns: number HIV tested number HIV-positive number on cotrimoxazole and number on antiretroviral therapy (ART). (excerpt)


Tropical Doctor | 2003

The diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Malawi.

Anthony D. Harries; N.J. Hargreaves; J. Kwanjana; Felix M Salaniponi

There is little information on a country-wide basis in sub-Saharan Africa about how the diagnosis of extra-pulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) is made. A country-wide cross-sectional study was carried out in 40 non-private hospitals in Malawi which register and treat (TB) patients in order to assess diagnostic practices in adults registered with EPTB. All patients aged 15 years and above in hospital on treatment for EPTB were reviewed using TB registers, case note files and clinical assessment. There were 244 patients, 132 men and 112 women whose mean age was 36 years. In 138 (57%) patients, all appropriate procedures and investigations, commensurate with hospital resources, had been carried out. Of 171 EPTB patients with cough for 3 weeks or longer, 138 (81%) submitted sputum specimens for smear microscopy of acid-fast bacilli (AFB). A confirmed diagnosis of TB was made in 15 (6%) patients based on finding AFB or caseating granulomas in specimens. In 157 (64%) patients, the diagnosis of EPTB was considered to be correct. In 46 (19%) patients the diagnosis was considered to be TB, although different from the type of EPTB with which the patient was registered. In 39 (16%) patients an alternative non-TB diagnosis was made and in two (1%) patients it was not possible to make a decision. Diagnostic practices need to be improved, and ways of doing this are discussed.


Tropical Doctor | 2000

Morbidity and mortality in prisons in Malawi

T. E. Nyirenda; A. Yadidi; A.D. Harries; J. Kwanjana; Salaniponi Fm

and emergency department with lower abdominal pain. Ann R Coil Surg EngI1995;77:193-7 4 Robinson HP, DeCrespingny Lch. Ectopic pregnancy. Clin Obstet Gynecol 1983;10:407-21 5 Najem AZ, Barillo DI; Spillert CR, Kerr IC, Iazaro EI. Appendicitis versus pelvic inflammatory disease: a diagnostic dilemma. Am Surg 1985;51:217-22 6 Twomey D. Awareness of ectopic pregnancy. Nigerian J Surg Sci 1994;4:48 7 Atanassov ID, Gelov GN, Atanassov PA, Gelov GN. Differential diagnostic difficulties of acute appendicitis in pubescent girls and young women [Abstract]. Dr J Surg 1995; 82(suppl 1):5 8 Walker BI, West CR, Colmer MR. Acute appendicitis: does removal of a normal appendix matter, what is the value of diagnostic accuracy and is surgical delay important. Ann R Coil Surg Engl 1995;77:358--63 9 Lujan lA, Robles R, Soria V, Torralba lA, Liron R. Value of laparoscopy for the management of acute right lower quadrant pain in females between 12 and 50 years of age [Abstract]. Dr J Surg 1994;81(suppl 1):6


Tropical Doctor | 2002

Traditional healers and their practices in Malawi

Anthony D. Harries; A. Banerjee; Gausi F; T. E. Nyirenda; Martin J. Boeree; J. Kwanjana; Salaniponi Fm

Itt is likely that most villages in Malawi have at least one traditional healer, and traditionall healer consultation appears to be very common. Forty-three per cent of in-patientss at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital (QECH), Blantyre, admitted a prior consultationn with a traditional healer (Seke and Maher, personal communication), and nearlyy 40% of smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) patients receiving treatmentt at QECH stated that they had seen a traditional healer before TB had been diagnosedd [1]. However, little has been written about the number of patients seen by traditionall healers or about traditional healer beliefs in Malawi.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Re-Treatment Tuberculosis Cases Categorised as “Other”: Are They Properly Managed?

Hannock Tweya; H. Kanyerere; Anne Ben-Smith; J. Kwanjana; Andreas Jahn; Caryl Feldacker; Dickman Gareta; Limbani Mbetewa; Mathew Kagoli; Mike Kalulu; Ralf Weigel; Sam Phiri; Mary Edginton

Background Although the World Health Organization (WHO) provides information on the number of TB patients categorised as “other”, there is limited information on treatment regimens or treatment outcomes for “other”. Such information is important, as inappropriate treatment can lead to patients remaining infectious and becoming a potential source of drug resistance. Therefore, using a cohort of TB patients from a large registration centre in Lilongwe, Malawi, our study determined the proportion of all TB re-treatment patients who were registered as “other”, and described their characteristics and treatment outcomes. Methods This retrospective observational study used routine program data to determine the proportion of all TB re-treatment patients who were registered as “other” and describe their characteristics and treatment outcomes between January 2006 and December 2008. Results 1,384 (12%) of 11,663 TB cases were registered as re-treatment cases. Of these, 898 (65%) were categorised as “other”: 707 (79%) had sputum smear-negative pulmonary TB and 191 (21%) had extra pulmonary TB. Compared to the smear-positive relapse, re-treatment after default (RAD) and failure cases, smear-negative “other” cases were older than 34 years and less likely to have their HIV status ascertained. Among those with known HIV status, “other” TB cases were more likely to be HIV positive. Of TB patients categorised as “other”, 462 (51%) were managed on the first-line regimen with a treatment success rate of 63%. Conclusion A large proportion of re-treatment patients were categorised as “other”. Many of these patients were HIV-infected and over half were treated with a first-line regimen, contrary to national guidelines. Treatment success was low. More attention to recording, diagnosis and management of these patients is warranted as incorrect treatment regimen and poor outcomes could lead to the development of drug resistant forms of TB.

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Anthony D. Harries

International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease

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N.J. Hargreaves

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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A.D. Harries

Kamuzu Central Hospital

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T. E. Nyirenda

World Health Organization

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Sam Phiri

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Julia Kemp

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

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Rony Zachariah

Médecins Sans Frontières

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Hannock Tweya

International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease

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Mary Edginton

International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease

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