@article{97842, keywords = {Infectious Diseases, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health}, author = {Fuller BB and Harris V and Parker C and Martinez A and Toubali E and Ebene BC and Asemanyi-Mensah K and Dembele M and Salissou AB and Kabré C and Méité A and Kane NM and Kargbo-Labour I and Batcho W and Diaby A and Yevstigneyeva V and Stukel DM}, editor = {Stolk WA}, title = {Contextual determinants of mass drug administration performance: Modelling fourteen years of lymphatic filariasis treatments in West Africa}, abstract = {

Background: Effective mass drug administration (MDA) is the cornerstone in the elimination of lymphatic filariasis (LF) and a critical component in combatting all neglected tropical diseases for which preventative chemotherapy is recommended (PC-NTDs). Despite its importance, MDA coverage, however defined, is rarely investigated systematically across time and geography. Most commonly, investigations into coverage react to unsatisfactory outcomes and tend to focus on a single year and health district. Such investigations omit more macro-level influences including sociological, environmental, and programmatic factors. The USAID NTD database contains measures of performance from thousands of district-level LF MDA campaigns across 14 years and 10 West African countries. Specifically, performance was measured as an MDA’s epidemiological coverage, calculated as persons treated divided by persons at risk. This analysis aims to explain MDA coverage across time and geography in West Africa using sociological, environmental, and programmatic factors.

Methodology: The analysis links epidemiological coverage data from 3,880 LF MDAs with contextual, non-NTD data via location (each MDA was specific to a health district) and time (MDA month, year). Contextual data included rainfall, temperature, violence or social unrest, COVID-19, the 2014 Ebola outbreak, road access/isolation, population density, observance of Ramadan, and the number of previously completed MDAs.

Principal findings: We fit a hierarchical linear regression model with coverage as the dependent variable and performed sensitivity analyses to confirm the selection of the explanatory factors. Above average rainfall, COVID-19, Ebola, violence and social unrest were all significantly associated with lower coverage. Years of prior experience in a district and above average temperature were significantly associated with higher coverage.

Conclusions/Significance: These generalized and context-focused findings supplement current literature on coverage dynamics and MDA performance. Findings may be used to quantify typically anecdotal considerations in MDA planning. The model and methodology are offered as a tool for further investigation.

}, year = {2023}, journal = {PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases}, volume = {17}, pages = {e0011146}, publisher = {Public Library of Science (PLoS)}, issn = {1935-2735}, url = {https://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0011146&type=printable}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pntd.0011146}, language = {Eng}, }