Community engagement among forest goers in a malaria prophylaxis trial: implementation challenges and implications

<p><strong>Background:&nbsp;</strong>Malaria transmission in Southeast Asia is increasingly confined to forests, where marginalized groups are exposed primarily through their work. Anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis may help to protect these people. This article examines the effect...

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Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awduron: Conradis-Jansen, F, Tripura, R, Peto, TJ, Callery, JJ, Adhikari, B, Ean, M, Jongdeepaisal, M, Pell, C, Khonputsa, P, Murgia, R, Sovannaroth, S, Müller, O, Cheah, PY, Dondorp, AM, von Seidlein, L, Maude, RJ
Fformat: Journal article
Iaith:English
Cyhoeddwyd: BioMed Central 2023
Disgrifiad
Crynodeb:<p><strong>Background:&nbsp;</strong>Malaria transmission in Southeast Asia is increasingly confined to forests, where marginalized groups are exposed primarily through their work. Anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis may help to protect these people. This article examines the effectiveness and practical challenges of engaging forest-goers to participate in a randomized controlled clinical trial of anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis with artemether-lumefantrine (AL) versus a control (multivitamin, MV) for malaria in northeast Cambodia.</p> <p><strong>Methods:&nbsp;</strong>The impact of engagement in terms of uptake was assessed as the proportion of people who participated during each stage of the trial: enrolment, compliance with trial procedures, and drug intake. During the trial, staff recorded the details of engagement meetings, including the views and opinions of participants and community representatives, the decision-making processes, and the challenges addressed during implementation.</p> <p><strong>Results:&nbsp;</strong>In total, 1613 participants were assessed for eligibility and 1480 (92%) joined the trial, 1242 (84%) completed the trial and received prophylaxis (AL: 82% vs MV: 86%, p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.08); 157 (11%) were lost to follow-up (AL: 11% vs MV: 11%, p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.79); and 73 (5%) discontinued the drug (AL-7% vs MV-3%, p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.005). The AL arm was associated with discontinuation of the study drug (AL: 48/738, 7% vs 25/742, 3%; p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.01). Females (31/345, 9%) were more likely (42/1135, 4%) to discontinue taking drugs at some point in the trial (p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.005). Those (45/644, 7%) who had no previous history of malaria infection were more likely to discontinue the study drug than those (28/836, 3%) who had a history of malaria (p&thinsp;=&thinsp;0.02). Engagement with the trial population was demanding because many types of forest work are illegal; and the involvement of an engagement team consisting of representatives from the local administration, health authorities, community leaders and community health workers played a significant role in building trust. Responsiveness to the needs and concerns of the community promoted acceptability and increased confidence in taking prophylaxis among participants. Recruitment of forest-goer volunteers to peer-supervise drug administration resulted in high compliance with drug intake. The development of locally-appropriate tools and messaging for the different linguistic and low-literacy groups was useful to ensure participants understood and adhered to the trial procedures. It was important to consider forest-goers` habits and social characteristics when planning the various trial activities.</p> <p><strong>Conclusions:&nbsp;</strong>The comprehensive, participatory engagement strategy mobilized a wide range of stakeholders including study participants, helped build trust, and overcame potential ethical and practical challenges. This locally-adapted approach was highly effective as evidenced by high levels of trial enrolment, compliance with trial procedures and drug intake.</p>