Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda

Background: People diagnosed with diabetes mellitus are increasing in sub-Saharan Africa and prompt care seeking depends on perceptions of the illness. Objective: The objective was to explore perceptions of diabetes in rural areas.Method: We conducted a qualitative, explorative and descriptive study...

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Main Authors: Elizeus Rutebemberwa, Sheila K. Katureebe, Sheba N. Gitta, Amos D. Mwaka, Lynn Atuyambe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2013-05-01
Series:Curationis
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-319265e8b50347dab84c85d6871fd47c2020-11-24T23:56:27ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792013-05-0136117dx.doi.org/10.4102/ curationis.v36i1.121 Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda Elizeus RutebemberwaSheila K. KatureebeSheba N. GittaAmos D. MwakaLynn AtuyambeBackground: People diagnosed with diabetes mellitus are increasing in sub-Saharan Africa and prompt care seeking depends on perceptions of the illness. Objective: The objective was to explore perceptions of diabetes in rural areas.Method: We conducted a qualitative, explorative and descriptive study in rural eastern Uganda. Eight focus group discussions with community members were conducted. Community members were presented with a story about a person with diabetes symptoms and their perceptions of the diagnosis and treatment elicited. Four focus group discussions with people with diabetes and seven key informant interviews with health workers were conducted. Respondents were asked how the community interpreted symptoms of diabetes, its causes and whether it was curable. Manifest content analysis was used.Results: Some respondents thought people with diabetes symptoms had HIV or were bewitched. Causes of diabetes mentioned included consuming too much fatty food. Some respondents thought diabetes is transmitted through air, sharing utensils with or sitting close to people with diabetes. Some respondents thought that diabetes could heal fast whilst others thought it was incurable. Conclusion: Misdiagnosis may cause delay in seeking proper care. Preventive programmes could build on people’s thinking that too much fatty food causes diabetes to promote diets with less fat. The perception of diabetes as a contagious disease leads to stigmatisation and affects treatment seeking. Seeing diabetes as curable could create patient expectations that may not be fulfilled in the management of diabetes. Rural communities would benefit from campaigns creating awareness of prevention, symptoms, diagnosis and management of diabetes. diabetes mellitusruralUganda
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizeus Rutebemberwa
Sheila K. Katureebe
Sheba N. Gitta
Amos D. Mwaka
Lynn Atuyambe
spellingShingle Elizeus Rutebemberwa
Sheila K. Katureebe
Sheba N. Gitta
Amos D. Mwaka
Lynn Atuyambe
Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
Curationis
diabetes mellitus
rural
Uganda
author_facet Elizeus Rutebemberwa
Sheila K. Katureebe
Sheba N. Gitta
Amos D. Mwaka
Lynn Atuyambe
author_sort Elizeus Rutebemberwa
title Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
title_short Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
title_full Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
title_fullStr Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of Eastern Uganda
title_sort perceptions of diabetes in rural areas of eastern uganda
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2013-05-01
description Background: People diagnosed with diabetes mellitus are increasing in sub-Saharan Africa and prompt care seeking depends on perceptions of the illness. Objective: The objective was to explore perceptions of diabetes in rural areas.Method: We conducted a qualitative, explorative and descriptive study in rural eastern Uganda. Eight focus group discussions with community members were conducted. Community members were presented with a story about a person with diabetes symptoms and their perceptions of the diagnosis and treatment elicited. Four focus group discussions with people with diabetes and seven key informant interviews with health workers were conducted. Respondents were asked how the community interpreted symptoms of diabetes, its causes and whether it was curable. Manifest content analysis was used.Results: Some respondents thought people with diabetes symptoms had HIV or were bewitched. Causes of diabetes mentioned included consuming too much fatty food. Some respondents thought diabetes is transmitted through air, sharing utensils with or sitting close to people with diabetes. Some respondents thought that diabetes could heal fast whilst others thought it was incurable. Conclusion: Misdiagnosis may cause delay in seeking proper care. Preventive programmes could build on people’s thinking that too much fatty food causes diabetes to promote diets with less fat. The perception of diabetes as a contagious disease leads to stigmatisation and affects treatment seeking. Seeing diabetes as curable could create patient expectations that may not be fulfilled in the management of diabetes. Rural communities would benefit from campaigns creating awareness of prevention, symptoms, diagnosis and management of diabetes.
topic diabetes mellitus
rural
Uganda
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AT amosdmwaka perceptionsofdiabetesinruralareasofeasternuganda
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