The relationship between antenatal care (ANC) visits and coverage of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP), and barriers to IPTp-SP access were examined. Four hundred and fifty-three women who had given birth during the study period were interviewed using a semi-structured questionnaire. Of these, 425 (93.8%) attended ANC at least once, but only 90 (21.2%) made four or more visits. Primigravidae 25 (29.8%) were more likely than multigravidae 65 (17.6%) to make more than four visits (P=0.012). Only 237 (52.3%) women accessed two or more doses of IPT-SP, which increased with the number of ANC visits (X(2) for linear trends, 117.7, P<0.001). However, 131 (28.9%) women made two or more ANC visits, which were sufficient for them to access two or more doses of IPTp-SP, but they did not. The main reasons were: not given SP by the midwife for unknown reasons 36 (27.5%), SP stock-outs 34 (26%) and irregular ANC attendance 18 (13.7%). Frequent ANC visits do not seem to ensure access to IPTp-SP in the presence of other barriers. The Roll Back Malaria target of 80% of women accessing two or more doses of IPTp-SP by 2010 appears unachievable unless alternative channels of delivery are found.
Access and compliance to sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) for intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp) when delivered by community-directed drug distributors (CDDs) of ivermectin for onchocerciasis control (intervention arm) and through delivery of SP-IPTp during antenatal care visit (control arm) was investigated in western Uganda. Every woman in both arms who delivered during the study period was interviewed on access and compliance to SP-IPT during her previous pregnancy. Overall, 926 women participated in the study (473 and 453 in the intervention and control arms, respectively). There were 467 (98.7%) women who accessed SP-IPTp at least once in the intervention arm and 401 (88.5%) in the control arm (P<0.001), and 424 (89.6%) women accessed at least two doses of SP-IPTp in the intervention arm compared with 237 (52.3%) in the control arm (P<0.001). The findings of this study suggest that a strategy using community resource people such as CDDs is an effective and feasible option to deliver SP-IPTp, because it uses existing community structures and volunteers, which creates easy access of the intervention, and should complement SP-IPTp access during antenatal care visit.
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