Child Health and Development
The goal of the Child Health and Development Unit is to end preventable child deaths and promote the healthy growth and development of all children in the first decade of their life.

Integrated management of childhood illness

 

Management of childhood illness

Every day, millions of children with potentially fatal illness are taken by their caregivers to be seen by health workers. In countries with a high burden of child mortality, a handful of conditions are responsible for these visits. Globally, over 80% of the underfive deaths are due to neonatal conditions and infectious diseases like pneumonia, diarrhoea, malaria, measles and meningitis, often compounded by malnutrition. Most childhood deaths can be prevented with effective interventions that are feasible for implementation, even in resource constrained settings. 

Children brought for medical treatment, especially in the low and middle-income countries, are often suffering from more than one condition. At the first level of primary health care services, diagnostic supports such as laboratory and radiology services are commonly limited or non-existent. Health care providers therefore benefit when they can use evidence-based algorithms using history, signs and symptoms to determine the course of management. This enables them to provide quality care and make the best use of the available resources.

To improve access and quality of care for newborns and children in primary health care services, WHO and UNICEF designed the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) strategy. The IMCI strategy aims at improving health worker skills, improving the health system and improving family and community practices. The aim is to strengthen prevention and management of common childhood illnesses, including in the newborn period, and support children’s healthy growth and development.


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What is Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI)?

IMCI is an integrated approach that focuses on the health and well-being of the child. IMCI aims to reduce preventable mortality, minimize illness and disability, and promote healthy growth and development of children under five years of age. IMCI includes both preventive and curative elements that can be implemented by families, in communities and in health facilities.

The strategy includes three main components:

  • Improving case management skills of healthcare providers;
  • Improving health systems to provide quality care;
  • Improving family and community health practices for health, growth and development.

In health facilities, the IMCI strategy promotes the accurate identification of childhood illnesses in outpatient settings, ensures appropriate combined treatment of all major conditions that affect a young child, strengthens the counselling of caretakers, and speeds up the referral of severely ill newborns and children. In the home setting, it promotes appropriate care seeking behaviours, improved nutrition and support for early childhood development, prevention of illness, and correct implementation and adherence to treatment.

 

Why is IMCI better than single-condition approaches?

IMCI considers each child that is brought to a health service in a holistic way. The clinical algorithms take into account the variety of conditions that may affect a newborn or child and put them at risk of preventable mortality or impaired growth and development. By facilitating an integrated assessment and combined treatment of conditions, IMCI focuses on effective case management and prevention of disease, and contributes to healthy growth and development, including through immunization and nutritional and developmental counselling.

 

What are the key requirements for IMCI implementation?

Implementation of the IMCI strategy requires a great deal of coordination among health programmes and services at national and sub-national (or district) levels. It involves working closely with and within ministries of health, local governments, and communities to plan for implementation based on the local context. Examples of key requirements are:

  • The adoption of a national policy and standards on an integrated approach to child health and development.
  • Regular review and updating of IMCI clinical guidelines with adaptation to the country’s epidemiology, medicines and commodities, relevant policies, and local foods and language used by the population.
  • Improving quality of care in primary health facilities by training, mentoring and support supervision of health workers in integrated assessment, treatment and effective counseling of caregivers.
  • Ensuring availability of the essential medicines, laboratory tests and key equipment for prevention and case management.
  • Strengthening referral pathways and improving quality of care in hospitals for management of severely ill children referred from the outpatient clinics.
  • Empowering families and communities to prevent disease, seek timely care from qualified health care providers for illness, provide adequate home care for sick children, and support children’s healthy growth and development. 

 

 

What has been the impact of IMCI?

Since the introduction of IMCI in the mid 1990’s, over 100 countries have adopted and implemented the strategy, either in part or all of its three components. Evidence suggests that if fully implemented, IMCI contributes to reduction in child mortality. A Cochrane review by Gera et al in 2016 found that the strategy was associated with a 15% reduction in child mortality when activities were implemented at scale in health facilities and communities.

Over the years, programme reviews have shown that IMCI implementation is influenced by different political, epidemiological, and social contexts. Three major determinants of effective implementation coverage are:

  • political leadership to ensure an enabling environment;
  • strengthened health systems based on empowered, recognized, motivated, supplied, and supported frontline health workers; and
  • empowered communities that can hold systems accountable and utilize IMCI services.
To achieve the Sustainable Development Goal target 3.2 of reducing child mortality to at least 25 or less deaths per 1000 live birth by 2030, it is paramount that key components of IMCI are implemented at scale, especially in countries with a high burden of preventable childhood mortality.

 

 

Relevant publications

Management of the sick young infant aged up to 2 months: Chart booklet

Every year, about 2.5 million children die in the first month of life, with 98% of these deaths occurring in developing countries. In 2017, 47% of all...

Pocket book of hospital care for children: Second edition

This is the second edition of the Pocket book of hospital care for children. It is for use by doctors, nurses and other health workers who are responsible...

These materials are designed to help lay community health workers (CHW) assess and treat sick children age 2 - 59 months. In this process, also known as...

IMCI chart booklet 2014 cover thumbnail

This chart booklet belongs to a set of distance learning course on integrated management of childhood illness.