spacer

ECWA Evangel Hospital, Jos, Nigeria
Compassionate Healthcare in the Name of Christ

Search
spacer
header
Website news
See the new look of the Evangel website at the beta site ... contribute your suggestions and problem reports.
Main Menu
Home
About Evangel
FAQs
Tour Evangel
How You Can Help
Photo Galleries
News
Journal Club
NEW! Discussion Forum
Links
News Feeds
Stories
Departments
AIDS is Real
Search
Events/Calendars
Contact Us
Readers' Favorites
Login Form
If you do not yet have a username and password, click on "Register" below.





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Free registration. Everyone welcome. No Spam.
po_1_150.jpg
Locations of visitors to this page
Subscribe to Evangel Newsfeed
See FAQs-Website for more information

Our Flickr Photo Gallery

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing photos in a set called Evangel Hospital. Make your own badge here.


AIDS Is Real and
It's in Our Church

Download the book free

 
Home arrow Journal Club arrow Encouraging news on intermittent preventive therapy in infancy (IPTi) for malaria

Encouraging news on intermittent preventive therapy in infancy (IPTi) for malaria Print E-mail
published 14-11-2007

Views : 1456

Times marked as favorite : 149


This study is a meta-analysis, and finds clinically significant effectiveness of IPTi.

The study I'm dying to see is the effect of IPT in HIV-infected infants and children. Is it something that should be added to their routine care?

Abstract:
Purpose of review: This review summarizes recent evidence regarding the efficacy of intermittent preventive treatment with focus on infancy (IPTi) and the rationale behind such a control strategy.

Recent findings: Pooled safety and efficacy analyses of all six trials of IPTi with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine conducted between 1999 and 2007 have demonstrated a 30% protective efficacy against clinical malaria, a 24% protective efficacy against all-cause hospital admissions, a 37% protective efficacy against malaria-related hospital admissions, and a 15% protective efficacy against anemia, all in the first year of life. Rebound in malaria following discontinuation of the intervention has not been noted in pooled analyses of the IPTi trials.

Summary: Given the efficacy, excellent safety and tolerability of the intervention and the fact that it is inexpensive and easily deliverable if linked to the Expanded Programme on Immunization, IPTi-sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine appears to add a valuable tool to the malaria-control armamentarium in endemic areas of Africa. Routine monitoring of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine efficacy will be required to guide future IPTi programme implementation. Variations of IPTi that target older children may be required for areas of Africa with highly seasonal malaria transmission.

Intermittent preventive therapy for malaria: progress and future directions. Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases. 20(6):613-620, December 2007.
   
Quote this article in website/blog
Mark as a favorite
Print
Send to friend
Related articles
Save this to del.icio.us

Keywords : malaria; infant; children; IPT; intermittent; preventive; therapy; prevention;


Readers' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

Average user rating

   (0 vote)

 


Add your comment
Name
E-mail
Title  
Comment
 
Available characters: 600
   Notify me of follow-up comments
  Mathguard security question:
IIW         HN8      
L F    F    P     543
BFY   P4T   9AI      
  S    L      3   XY2
WOW         2KT      
   
   

No comment posted



mXcomment 1.0.5 © 2007-2009 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 14 November 2007 )
 
Next >
spacer
© 2009 ECWA Evangel Hospital, Jos, Nigeria
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
spacer