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2021 Vol. 3, No. 17

Preplanned Studies
A Case Study on the Disease Burden and Influencing Factors of Imported Malaria Patients in a County-Level Hospital — Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, 2016–2019
Qiuli Xu, Kangming Lin, Shenning Lu, Lei Duan, Hongrang Zhou, Xuejiao Ma, Bei Wang, Ning Xiao
2021, 3(17): 351-354. doi: 10.46234/ccdcw2021.096
Abstract(7053) HTML (538) PDF 361KB(35)
Abstract:
What is already known on this topic?

Imported malaria cases endanger people’s health and potentially cause local re-transmission, and they may also cause economic loss on patients’ families and society as a whole.

What is added by this report?

This is the first report to focus on the disease burden of a case study incurred by the imported malaria. The results indicated that the median direct medical cost was 2,904.4 CNY and the median indirect cost was 242.0 CNY for a patient’s hospitalization. The economic cost was related to age, time between onset and diagnosis, and days of stay in hospital.

What are the implications for public health practice?

This study analyzed the main causes based on both direct and indirect economic loss of imported malaria cases to provide general information for the evaluation of the disease burden of imported malaria patients and shed light on the rational allocation of medical resources.

Challenges of Sustaining Malaria Community Case Management in 81 Township Hospitals along the China-Myanmar Border Region — Yunnan Province, China, 2020
Wei Ding, Shenning Lu, Qiuli Xu, Xuejiao Ma, Bei Wang, Jingbo Xue, Xiaodong Sun, Jianwei Xu, Chris Cotter, Duoquan Wang, Yayi Guan, Ning Xiao
2021, 3(17): 355-359. doi: 10.46234/ccdcw2021.097
Abstract(6643) HTML (735) PDF 236KB(36)
Abstract:

What is already known on this topic?

The health workforce at township hospitals in the China-Myanmar border region has played a key role in sustaining Community case management of malaria (CCMm), while few studies have investigated their performance and challenges.

What is added by this report?

Sustaining CCMm in the region was subject to the following major challenges: insufficient training on malaria diagnosis and testing, lacking necessary and timely treatment for patients, and risks of instability among the malaria workforce.

What are the implications for public health practice?

These challenges called for the national and provincial authorities to provide regular trainings and intensive supervision to strengthen malaria diagnosis and treatment capacity in the region and to set up incentive mechanisms and individual career development paths to sustain the workforce.

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