‘Better medicines for children’ within the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness framework: a qualitative inquiry in Uganda

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Xavier Nsabagasani
  • Jasper Ogwal-Okeng
  • Ebba Holme Hansen
  • Anthony Mbonye
  • Herbert Muyinda
  • Freddie Ssengooba
Background: The Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses is the main approach for treating children in
more than 100 low income countries worldwide. In 2007, the World Health Assembly urged countries to integrate
‘better medicines for children’ into their essential medicines lists and treatment guidelines. WHO regularly provides
generic algorithms for IMCI and publishes the Model Essential Medicines List with child-friendly medicines based on
new evidence for member countries to adopt. However, the status of ‘better medicines for children’ within the
Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses approach in Uganda has not been studied.
Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted with: two officials from the ministry of health; two district health
officials and, 22 health workers from public health facilities. Interview transcripts were manually analyzed for
manifest and latent content.
Results: Child-appropriate dosage formulations were not included in the package for the Integrated Management
of Childhood Illnesses and ministry officials attributed this to resource constraints and lack of initial guidance from
the World Health Organization. Underfunding reportedly undercut efforts to: orient health workers; do support
supervision and update treatment guidelines to reflect ‘better medicines for children’. Health workers reported
difficulties in administering tablets and capsules to under-five children and that’s why they preferred liquid oral
dosage formulations, suppositories and injections.
Conclusions: The IMCI strategy in Uganda was not revised to reflect child-appropriate dosage formulations – a
missed opportunity for improving the quality of management of childhood illnesses. Funding was an obstacle to
the integration of child-appropriate dosage formulations. Ministry of health should prioritize funding for the
Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses and revising the Essential Medicines and Health Supplies List of
Uganda, the Uganda Clinical Guidelines and, the Treatment Charts for the Integrated Management of Childhood
Illnesses to reflect child-appropriate dosage formulations.
Keywords: IMCI, Better medicines for children, Dosage formulations and Uganda
Original languageEnglish
Article number22
JournalJournal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
Volume9
Number of pages16
ISSN2052-3211
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

ID: 162184160