Health-seeking behaviour and cost of fever treatment to households in a malaria-endemic setting of northern Ghana: a cross-sectional study

Author:

Dalaba Maxwell AyindenabaORCID,Welaga Paul,Dalinjong Philip AyizemORCID,Chatio Samuel,Immurana Mustapha,Alhassan Robert Kaba,Klu Desmond,Manyeh Alfred KwesiORCID,Agorinya Isaiah,Oduro Abraham,Adongo Philip Baba,Akweongo Patricia

Abstract

ObjectivesTo examine the health-seeking behaviour and cost of fever treatment to households in Ghana.DesignCross-sectional household survey conducted between July and September 2015.SettingKassena-Nankana East and West districts in Upper East region of Ghana.ParticipantsIndividuals with an episode of fever in the 2 weeks preceding a visit during routine health and demographic surveillance system data collection were selected for the study. Sociodemographic characteristics, treatment-seeking behaviours and cost of treatment of fever were obtained from the respondents.ResultsOut of 1845 households visited, 21% (393 of 1845) reported an episode of fever. About 50% (195 of 393) of the fever cases had blood sample taken for testing by microscopy or Rapid Diagnostic Test, and 73.3% (143 of 195) were confirmed to have malaria. Of the 393 people with fever, 70% (271 of 393) reported taking an antimalarial and 24.0% (65 of 271) took antimalarial within 24 hours of the onset of illness. About 54% (145 of 271) of the antimalarials were obtained from health facilities.The average cost (direct and indirect) incurred by households per fever treatment was GH¢27.8/US$7.3 (range: GH¢0.2/US$0.1–GH¢200/US$52.6). This cost is 4.6 times the daily minimum wage of unskilled paid jobs of Ghanaians (US$1.6). The average cost incurred by those enrolled into the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was GH¢24.8/US$6.5, and GH¢50/US$11.6 for those not enrolled.ConclusionsPrompt treatment within 24 hours of onset of fever was low (24%) compared with the Roll Back Malaria Programme target of at least 80%. Cost of treatment was relatively high when compared with average earnings of households in Ghana and enrolment into the NHIS reduced the cost of fever treatment remarkably. It is important to improve access to malaria diagnosis, antimalarials and enrolment into the NHIS in order to improve the case management of fever/malaria and accelerate universal health coverage in Ghana.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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