Abstract
The study assessed the validity of community health volunteers' diagnosis of pneumonia in children through simple clinical signs. Data were collected by a group of research physicians who observed the case management performance of 120 health volunteers in Bangladesh where the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee has been providing community-based acute respiratory infection control since mid-1992. 1,166 children age 3–60 months were assessed at household level by both a community health volunteer and a research physician. Using physician diagnosis as gold standard, health volunteers' diagnosis of pneumonia was 67.6% sensitive and 95.2% specific. Cohen's k for agreement between volunteers and physicians was 0.67. Of the clinical signs elicited, chest in drawing and noisy breathing predicted physician's diagnosis of pneumonia most strongly ([positive predictive value (PPV)] 84% and 79%, respectively). The study concludes that less educated health volunteers can be effectively used in diagnosing pneumonia at grassroots level in developing countries.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
