So, per allusion at the end of my last blog post, I’ve
decided that it would be worthwhile to explain a little bit about the formal,
actual “work” work I do here. To date I
have been reticent to do so because I know that while it is very interesting
and exciting work to me, I am a pretty huge nerd and people less nerdy than I
may not be predisposed to find it so fascinating. I am, after all, the one that
once made Christmas sugar cookies in the shape of various parasites and
diseases (HIV virus, Giardia lambila amoeba, Taenia solium tapeworm, etc.)…
Proof |
And so, to make this post more digestible for those
people who are not of my extreme-nerd persuasion, I have done two things.
One - throughout the blog I have sporadically placed joke
answers and responses. They are not clearly identifiable simply from scrolling
through the blog so you will HAVE to read through it to find them. I apologize
in advance for the crude nature of many of these jokes. They are simply the
ones that have stuck with me over time.
And two – I have devised rules to make the reading of
this post into a drinking game. People who know me well shouldn’t be surprised
by this given that I am inclined to make most anything into a game to make it
more palatable or interesting. The rules
of the game are as such:
1.
Every time I say “Pecadom” take a sip of your
beverage.
2.
Every time I say “Plus”, send me an email with an
original compliment, something you have never said to anyone ever before (to
smollenk @ gmail).
Are you ready?
What do you call a Roman soldier who is smiling with
pubic hair in his teeth?
The region of Kedougou (the region in which I live),
located in the southeast corner of Senegal and bordering both Guinea and Mali, has
the highest rates of malaria in the country.
In my district specifically, the district of Saraya, malaria accounts
for 25% of outpatient visits annually, up to 40% of outpatient visits during
the malaria season (June to November), 85% of hospitalizations, two thirds of
all hospital deaths, and 50% of deaths in children under the age of five. It is the single greatest burden on the
healthcare system. It also has an immense impact on the population physically,
emotionally, financially and culturally.
A glad-i-ate-r. Here, many people
accept regular, debilitating, seasonal illness and the death of young children
as a fact of life. People do not know
that in other parts of the world it is not normal for people to regularly fall
ill with fever or that the death of young children can be only a rare exception
to the rule and not the substance of it.
In efforts to control the disease and reduce its
catastrophic burden, we as public health professionals emphasize two things:
prevention and treatment. Why did the golfer wear two pairs of pants?
Prevention comes in several forms: the use of
Insecticide-Treated Bednets (ITNs) to prevent the Anopheles night-biting
mosquitoes (the vector for malaria) from biting while you are asleep; the
spraying of insecticides on the inside walls of homes to eliminate resting
spots for mosquitoes after they have taken a blood meal (aka Indoor Residual
Spraying or IRS); mass drug administration programs to treat all children
during peak transmission seasons (aka Seasonal Malaria Chemoprophylaxis or SMC);
special preventative drug therapy programs for pregnant women who are
particularly vulnerable to the disease for various reasons (aka Intermittent
Preventative Therapy or IPTp); environmental clean-up campaigns to eliminate
mosquito breeding grounds (standing water, etc.); the wearing of long sleeves
and long pants or insecticides at dusk and dawn; and education about the
disease and all of these techniques I have listed.
In regards to treatment we emphasize that all malaria
cases should be treated and that they should be treated as soon as possible. In
case they get a hole in one. This is
important to reduce the likelihood of the disease developing into the more
severe, cerebral form, to reduce likelihood of death, and to minimize the
opportunity for further transmission.
And here is where PECADOM Plus comes in.
Many barriers exist that prohibit rural populations from
accessing care. These may be geographic (the doctor is far away, the road to
get there is blocked by a seasonal river, etc.), educational (people do not
know the importance of seeking medical attention early/at all when they have a
fever or they think that seeking medical attention could be detrimental because
if they have Yellow Fever and they are stuck by a needle they will explode – a
belief unfortunately held by some here), financial (they cannot afford the
consultation fee, the testing fee, the medication fee or to pay for transport
to get to a health facility) or otherwise.
To address some of these barriers, the Ministry of Health
in Senegal implemented a home-based care model called PECADOM. What’s the
difference between like, love, and showing off?
For this program, volunteer community-based care providers known as
DSDOMs (Dispensateur de Soin au Domicile) in rural villages were trained
specifically to perform rapid diagnostic tests for malaria and administer
malaria treatment for uncomplicated cases, referring all negative and severe
cases to the local health post. Instead
of having to worry about how to get to see a doctor when their child was
feverish, community members in these villages could go to the homes of these
volunteers and obtain immediate, free malaria diagnosis and treatment.
While this program was very impactful, some limitations were
still evident in the existing model. As case detection was passive (meaning
that the DSDOMs just sat around at home passively and waited for sick people to
come to them), malaria detection and treatment relied on the patient making the
decision to seek care. Spit, swallow and blowing bubbles. This meant that the
aforementioned educational barriers were still in play; people needed to make
the decision to seek out treatment which remained an issue among community
members who were not educated to do so.
In 2010, a Peace Corps volunteer named Ian Hennessee (or
locally known as Fode Mari Tandian) piloted a project in his village, Missera
Dantila, and two other very small villages in which they built on this program
to turn it into an active model. The
DSDOMs that previously sat around at home and waited for their neighbors to
show up whenever they were sick would instead be paid a small wage to conduct
sweeps of every household in their village once a week during the rainy season
to actively seek out cases. They would go house by house to ask if there were
any people present who were sick with fever. What is similar about a
Pope’s balls and the balls on a Christmas tree? Rapid diagnostic tests would be
administered to anyone with symptoms and treatment would be provided on the
spot, right in people’s homes. They called this new and improved version of the
PECADOM Program, PECADOM Plus.
While initial results were promising, the sample size (3
villages) for this program was very small. Therefore, in 2012 and 2013, Peace
Corps volunteer Anne Linn (aka Sadio Tigana, my ancien), partnered with the
Saraya Health District to scale up this program to 14 villages in the Saraya
District and conduct a thorough program evaluation to test its impact. Her results (awaiting publication) were quite
convincing.
At the start of the program a similar prevalence of symptomatic
malaria, just over 1% of the total population, was found in both sets of
villages. By the time rainy season was half way over, the prevalence was found
to be 2.5 times higher in the comparison villages (in the normal PECADOM
Program) than in the intervention villages (using active case detection in the
PECADOM Plus program). When the program ended the prevalence in comparison
villages was nearly 16 times higher than in the intervention villages, where
only six cases of symptomatic malaria were found.
They are only for decoration. This was enough to convince the National
Malaria Control Program (Program National de Lutte Contre Le Paludisme aka
PNLP) to adopt the PECADOM Plus program model and scale it up to the entire
region of Kedougou this year. And if it
goes well this year, they will scale it up to the entire regions of Kolda,
Tambacounda and Sedhiou (also high malaria prevalence areas) next year as well.
And this is now where I come in.
I forewarn you at this juncture that I have run out of
jokes and so I have supplemented further text with numerous pictures. Hopefully
that suffices to keep your interest.
While PECADOM Plus is officially a PNLP program this
year, Peace Corps volunteers are still playing a big role. After all, it is a
sort of Peace Corps baby that we all want to take care of and see succeed. Plus, there is generally a shortage of
skilled health personnel to supervise programs like this one and it is one of
our official Peace Corps roles to help fill this gap. And so we have taken on
many tasks.
We are trainers. I gave my first ever presentation in
French to a group of 50-some-odd DSDOMs and Community Supervisors during
Ramadan about how to form care groups with women in their villages (DSDOMs are
asked to gather a group of women in their village, at least one from every
household, and educate them about malaria).
I also spent several weeks racing all over the district - 70km in one
direction, 80km in another - to work one-on-one with DSDOMs during practical trainings
to practice treatment algorithms and learn how to use reporting tools. Often I would lead role-play activities (in
Malinke) in which I would pretend that the DSDOM had just entered my home and a
member of my family was sick and in need of their care. Nicole, a fellow PCV,
friend and accomplice in many of these trainings, would often play the part of
sick and terrified child who threw a fit when the DSDOMs tried to measure her
temperature (to their utter amusement) and pretended to cry when they fake-poked
her finger to draw blood for the rapid diagnostic test. We would start with
simple, straightforward malaria cases and then move on to trying to trick them
by unveiling secrets along the way such as the fact that I was pretend-pregnant
which meant they had to refer me to the nearest health post instead of treat
me.
Upper Left: Me and Renee training DSDOMs about using reporting forms
Upper Right: DSDOMs receiving training on using reporting forms by Renee and I
Lower Left: Nicole training DSDOMs on malaria treatment algorithms under the mango tree
Lower Right: Travelling far and wide on bush roads to go help with training
We are supervisors. Every week (before all of these Ebola
shenanigans in Senegal) we would accompany DSDOMs on their house-to-house
sweeps to see them in action and make sure they were doing everything correctly
in the field.
Picture on Left: Nicole and Ntafe Cissokho, one of our community supervisors
Picture on Right: A DSDOM and one of the women in his women's care group
We are watch-dogs.
Every week there are Peace Corps volunteers responsible for calling all
the program Community Supervisors (the people who the DSDOMs report to) to
inquire about whether or not sweeps happened that week, why they didn’t if they
didn’t, what medications or tests they might be running out of and any other
issues they may have. We use this
information to help identify issues early and find resolutions as well as to
track important program indicators.
In this capacity we are also advocates. When there are issues and concerns, we can
communicate them to actors at all levels of the health system up to partners at
the PNLP and PMI/CDC/USAID with whom we have constant communication.
Me and some congressional staffers from the office of Barbara Boxer to whom I presented about PECADOM Plus |
We are data collectors. For the last 5 days I have had my
head buried in reporting forms, entering data into Excel spreadsheets, cleaning
data, analyzing data and working on reports for health posts, the Saraya Health
District and the Regional Health administrators about the status of the program
half way through its duration.
We are innovators. As the program has been scaled up to
new level this year, there are plenty of new challenges that come along related
to scale. We have the opportunity to
identify these processes that are not functioning efficiently and devise
solutions for this year’s program and for adjusting the protocol for next
year’s even more expansive program scale-up.
We are also educators. To the greatest extent possible,
Peace Corps volunteers were present for the formation and training of women’s
care groups in all the DSDOMs’ villages, meaning that we drove or biked out to
all of these far-out villages to meet with the DSDOMs, meet the women in their villages
and talk about malaria in their communities.
A women's care group gathering |
So that is more or less PECADOM Plus. Or as we say in
Malinke, “wo le mu le PECADOM Plus ti”…
And that is what the bulk of my work has been like here
so far.
Tipsy yet??
I look forward to some compliments…