‘A prospective case control study to evaluate shock index for identifying patients at risk of clinically important malaria in refugee settings’

Author:

Kuhrt Katy1ORCID,Seed Paul T1ORCID,Shennan Andrew H1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Women and Children's Health, School of Life Course Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, St Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK

Abstract

Bidibidi Refugee Settlement's 223,000 refugees are vulnerable to malaria due to crowded conditions and limited healthcare access. Early identification and referral of suspected cases is key to reduce morbidity and mortality. We evaluated the shock index (heart rate/ systolic blood pressure) for detection of abnormal vital signs, calculated by the CRADLE Vital Signs Alert device, which can be used in routine patient blood pressure and heart rate assessment by non-medically trained Voluntary Health Team workers. The single most frequent diagnosis causing shock was malaria, and thus the device was useful to detect severe cases (as well as discovering other cases), after calculating appropriate shock indices.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference15 articles.

1. The burden of malaria in post-emergency refugee sites: A retrospective study

2. The UN Refugee Agency. Coronavirus Outbreak. [Accessed on 12 May 2020 at https://www.unhcr.org/uk/coronavirus-covid-19.html].

3. National Malaria Control Program. Ministry of Health, republic of Uganda. [Accessed on 9th 206 June 2020 at https://www.health.go.ug/programs/national-malaria-control207program/].

4. The Republic of Uganda Ministry of Health. Press Statement on the Mosquito Net distribution among Refugees in Uganda, 20 June 2018. [Accessed on 03/09/2018 at health.go.ug/download/file/fid/1907].

5. The Republic of Uganda Ministry of Health. Operational Guidelines on COVID-19 for Village Health Teams (VHTs). 11.

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