The feasibility and impact of deploying a four-tests panel at antenatal care in primary health care facilities of a developing country, Kenya

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Authors

Ochwoto, Missiani
Matiang’i, Micah
Onchieku, Noah M.
Ndoria, Simon
Matoke, Lydia
Otinga, Maureen
Zablon, Jeremiah
Mathebula, Evans Mantiri
Matoke-Muhia, Damaris

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Contracting HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B virus (HBV), and malaria during pregnancy significantly affects the health of the woman, the pregnancy, and the unborn child. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends testing pregnant women for these infections to achieve triple elimination of mother-to-child transmissions. However, this goal has not been fully realized in low- to medium-income countries, primarily due to segmented testing practices. This study aimed to investigate the effect of introducing a four-tests panel on the quality of antenatal care (ANC) among pregnant women attending selected Primary Health Care facilities in Kenya. METHODS: Using a multi-design approach, we analyzed ANC medical records from 577 pregnant women attending eight facilities across four different counties. Blood from the women fingerpick was tested for HIV, Syphilis Hepatitis B Virus and Malaria using the four-tests panel and the results compared to those in the medical records. RESULTS: Out of 577 ANC women, only 8.3% had test results for all four infections available. The majority of the mothers had been tested for syphilis (93.7%), HIV (78.5%), and malaria (62.6%), only 19.5% had been tested for HBV. Testing the women using the 4-tests panel yielded positivity rates of 6.9% for HIV, 0.9% for syphilis, 1.9% for malaria, and 1.1% for HBV. Among those without previous test results, the positivity rate was 2.8% for syphilis, 13.8% for HIV (with 10.6% testing positive for recent p24 infections, F = 24.876, p < 0.001), 2.3% for malaria, and 4.5% for HBV, with 83.3% of these individuals having no prior test results. The mean positivity rate of those tested using the 4-tests panel compared to segmented single tests was significantly different. The panel was cost-effective and user-friendly for healthcare workers, and in facilities facing staff shortages, it reduced turnaround time and workloads by half. The use of the panel also improved the profiling of ANC mothers and enhanced data management for the four infections by 91.7%. CONCLUSION: Adopting the 4-tests panel has the potential to improve test result outputs, enhance the quality-of-service delivery, and contribute significantly to the achievement of triple elimination goals.

Description

DATA AVAILABITY STATEMENT: The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.

Keywords

Triple elimination, Cost benefit analysis, Test panels, P24 antigen, HIV test, Hepatitis B virus (HBV), Congenital syphilis, SDG-03: Good health and well-being, SDG-09: Industry, innovation and infrastructure, Antenatal care (ANC), Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being
SDG-09: Industry, innovation and infrastructure

Citation

Ochwoto, M., Matiang'i, M., Onchieku, N.M., Ndoria, S., Matoke, L., Otinga, M., Zablon, J, Mathebula, E. & Matoke-Muhia, D. (2024) The feasibility and impact of deploying a four-tests panel at antenatal care in primary health care facilities of a developing country, Kenya. Frontiers in Public Health 12:1399612. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1399612.