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. 2019 Jan 7;100(2):460–469. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.18-0529

Table 1.

List of malaria and pneumonia messages along with sample proverbs

Timing Arm 1: Malaria only Arm 2: Malaria, pneumonia, and diarrhea
Monday am “Check ALL patients with fever or history of fever for signs of severe malaria! if any severe sign TREAT and REFER urgently!” Better be safe than sorry “Check ALL sick children for any DANGER sign-if unable to drink OR lethargic OR vomit everything OR convulsions TREAT and REFER!” Well begun is half done
Monday pm “Ask ALL patients about fever, take temperature, and check other malaria signs and symptoms.” Where there is smoke there is fire “Check ALL sick children for danger signs! check ALL for fever, cough, difficult breathing, diarrhea, pallor, ear, and other problems!” The seeker is the finder
Tuesday Table 2: am “Test for malaria ALL children < 5 and preg women with fever. Also, test ALL patients ≥ 5 with fever + one symptom.” Look before you leap “For ALL children with cough or difficult breathing COUNT BREATHS in 1 minute and look for chest indrawing and stridor!” Actions speak louder than words
Tuesday pm “For febrile patients without severe signs, TREAT for malaria ONLY if test is positive—do NOT treat negatives for malaria!” A word to the wise is sufficient “Child has PNEUMONIA IF breath count is FAST: Over 60 if less than 2 months, over 50 if 2–12 months. Or over 40 if 12–59 months.” Never too old to learn
Wednesday am “When malaria test is NEGATIVE, check for other causes; if none found, give antipyretic and ask patient to return if fever persists!” Persistent work triumphs “Child with cough or difficult breathing has SEVERE PNEUMONIA if any danger sign, chest indrawing, or stridor present–TREAT and REFER!” Knowledge is power
Wednesday pm “For uncomplicated malaria 1st line Rx is LA, 2nd line is ASAQ. For children < 5 kg and in 1st preg trimester, give quinine + clindamycin.” Do the right thing “Child does NOT have pneumonia if breath count is NOT fast and NO danger/severe sign–treat for cold; do NOT give antibiotic!” Things don’t change; we change
Thursday am “New pre-referral Rx for severe malaria is IM artesunate; if not available, use IM quinine; if quinine O/S, use rectal artesunate.” Never too old to learn “For pneumonia, 1st line Rx is amoxicillin and 2nd line is erythromycin. For SEVERE pneumonia, treat with IM X-pen and REFER!” It works if you work it
Thursday pm “Prescribe LA based on WEIGHT: 1 × 6 for 5–14 kg; 2 × 6 for 15–24 kg; 3 × 6 for 25–34 kg; 4 × 6 for ≥ 35 kg.” A goal without a plan is just a wish “Give ALL children FIRST antibiotic dose at facility, explain dosing at home, and advise to finish all doses even if feel better!” A little late is too late
Friday am “Give FIRST LA DOSE to ALL patients with uncomplicated malaria at FACILITY even if on an empty stomach!” To be willing is to be able “Give ALL children with diarrhea ORS, zinc and advice on extra fluids; give antibiotics ONLY if blood in stool!” First things first
Friday pm “Advise ALL patients to take 2nd LA dose after 8 hours, then every 12 hours to complete all six doses even if they feel better!” Say little but say it well “Assess dehydration in child with diarrhea; if some dehydration, give ORS + 1st dose zinc at FACILITY; if severe, give IV fluid or REFER!” Willingness is the key

ORS = oral rehydration solution; Rx = prescription; IM = intramuscular; ASAQ = artesunate-amodiaquine. Messages displayed as they appeared on health workers’ mobile phones; some spacing was compressed to accommodate character count restrictions. “LA” is the local terminology for AL.