Changing the malaria treatment protocol policy in Timor-Leste: an examination of context, process, and actors’ involvement
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Martins, João S
Zwi, Anthony B
Hobday, Karen
Bonaparte, Fernando
Kelly, Paul M
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BioMed Central
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In 2007 Timor-Leste, a malaria endemic country, changed its Malaria Treatment Protocol for uncomplicated falciparum malaria from sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine to artemether-lumefantrine. The change in treatment policy was based on the rise in morbidity due to malaria and perception of increasing drug resistance. Despite a lack of nationally available evidence on drug resistance, the Ministry of Health decided to change the protocol. The policy process leading to this change was examined through a qualitative study on how the country developed its revised treatment protocol for malaria. This process involved many actors and was led by the Timor-Leste Ministry of Health and the WHO country office. This paper examines the challenges and opportunities identified during this period of treatment protocol change.
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antimalarials, artemisinins, clinical protocols, cooperative behavior, drug combinations, drug substitution, east timor, ethanolamines, fluorenes, health planning organizations, health policy, humans, interinstitutional relations, malaria, falciparum, policy making, pyrimethamine, sulfadoxine, time factors
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Health Research Policy and Systems
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