Disability in childhood and the equity of health services: a cross-sectional comparison of mass drug administration strategies for soil-transmitted helminths in southern Malawi

Author:

Witek-McManus StefanORCID,Simwanza James,Msiska Rejoice,Mangawah Hastings,Oswald William,Timothy Joseph,Galagan Sean,Pearman Emily,Shaikh Mariyam,Legge Hugo,Walson JuddORCID,Juziwelo Lazarus,Davey Calum,Pullan Rachel,Bailey Robin L,Kalua Khumbo,Kuper HannahORCID

Abstract

BackgroundSchool-based approaches are an efficient mechanism for the delivery of basic health services, but may result in the exclusion of children with disabilities if they are less likely to participate in schooling. Community-based ‘door to door’ approaches may provide a more equitable strategy to ensure that children with disabilities are reached, but disability is rarely assessed rigorously in the evaluation of health interventions.ObjectivesTo describe the prevalence and factors associated with disability among children aged 5–17 years and to assess the relative effectiveness of routine school-based deworming (SBD) compared with a novel intervention of community-based deworming (CBD) in treating children with disabilities for soil-transmitted helminths.SettingDeWorm3 Malawi Site (DMS), Mangochi district, Malawi.ParticipantsAll 44 574 children aged 5–17 years residing within the DMS.Primary and secondary outcome measuresDisability was defined as a functional limitation in one or more domains of the Washington Group/UNICEF Child Functioning Module administered as part of a community-based census. Treatment of all children during SBD and CBD was independently observed and recorded. For both intervention types, we performed bivariate analyses (z-score) of the absolute proportion of children with and without disabilities treated (absolute differences (ADs) in receipt of treatment), and logistic regression to examine whether disability status was associated with the likelihood of treatment (relative differences in receipt of treatment).ResultsThe overall prevalence of disability was 3.3% (n=1467), and the most common domains of disability were hearing, remembering and communication. Boys were consistently more likely to have a disability compared with girls at all age groups, and disability was strongly associated with lower school attendance and worse levels of education. There was no significant difference in the proportion of children with disabilities treated during SBD when assessed by direct observation (−1% AD, p=0.41) or likelihood of treatment (adjusted risk ratio (aRR)=1.07, 95% CI 0.89 to 1.28). Treatment of all children during CBD was substantially higher than SBD, but again showed no significant difference in the proportions treated (−0.5% AD, p=0.59) or likelihood of treatment (aRR=1.04, 95% CI 0.99 to 1.10).ConclusionSBD does not appear to exclude children with disabilities, but the effect of consistently lower levels of educational participation of children with disabilities should be actively considered in the design and monitoring of school health interventions.Trial registration numberNCT03014167.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office

Publisher

BMJ

Reference77 articles.

1. United Nations Children’s Fund . Seen, counted, included: using data to shed light on the well-being of children with disabilities. New York: UNICEF, 2021.

2. Graham N , Schultz L , Mitra S , et al . Disability in middle childhood and adolescence. In: Bundy DAP , Silva ND , Horton S , eds. Child and adolescent health and development. Washington (DC): The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, 2017.

3. Burden of disability in children and adolescents must be integrated into the global health agenda;Cieza;BMJ,2021

4. World Health Organization & World Bank . World report on disability 2011. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2011.

5. Disability and school attendance in 15 low- and middle-income countries;Mizunoya;World Dev,2018

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