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To study if a proactive strategy of weekly household visits by community health workers (CHWs) to identify people with malaria symptoms, offer diagnostic testing, and treatment for those with positive tests in Chadiza District, Eastern Province, can decrease malaria incidence and prevalence compared to conventional community case management.
Full description
This study will be a two arm, cluster-randomized controlled trial to determine whether year round weekly household visits by CHWs to detect and test people of all ages with fever or history of fever with RDTs (and offer diagnosis and referral or treatment of diarrhea and pneumonia for children under 5 years), and offer treatment with an ACT for those who test positive compared to standard passive iCCM by CHWs (which includes malaria case management for all ages in Zambia), is associated with a greater reduction in confirmed malaria cases and parasite prevalence over a 2-year follow-up period.
Randomization will occur at the level of the CHW catchment areas. Thirty-three clusters will be enrolled in each arm for a total of 66 clusters. Primary study outcomes will be evaluated based on household-level cross-sectional surveys conducted at baseline and end-line and confirmed malaria case data collected through the health system throughout the study period.
Primary objectives:
Secondary objectives:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
All residents of all ages in the study area will be eligible to receive the CHW intervention.
All ages with fever
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10,890 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
John M Miller, PhD; Busiku Hamainza, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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