Adherence to 7-day primaquine treatment for the radical cure of P. vivax in the Peruvian Amazon.
Grietens, Koen Peeters;
Soto, Veronica;
Erhart, Annette;
Ribera, Joan Muela;
Toomer, Elizabeth;
Tenorio, Alex;
Montalvo, Tanilu Grande;
Rodriguez, Hugo;
Cuentas, Alejandro Llanos;
D'Alessandro, Umberto;
+1 more...Gamboa, Dionicia;
(2010)
Adherence to 7-day primaquine treatment for the radical cure of P. vivax in the Peruvian Amazon.
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 82 (6).
pp. 1017-1023.
ISSN 0002-9637
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.2010.09-0521
Permanent Identifier
Use this Digital Object Identifier when citing or linking to this resource.
Despite being free of charge, treatment adherence to 7-day primaquine for the radical cure of Plasmodium vivax was estimated at 62.2% among patients along the Iquitos-Nauta road in the Peruvian Amazon. The principal reason for non-adherence was the perceived adverse effects related to local humoral illness conceptions that hold that malaria produces a hot state of body, which is further aggravated by the characteristically hot medical treatment. Notably, patients were willing to adhere to the first 3 days of treatment during which symptoms are most apparent and include the characteristic chills. Nevertheless, as symptoms abate, the perceived aggravating characteristics of the medication outweigh the perceived advantages of treatment adherence. Improving community awareness about the role of primaquine to prevent further malaria transmission and fostering a realistic system of direct observed treatment intake, organized at community level, can be expected to improve adherence to the radical cure of P. vivax in this area.