Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State

Aim: To examine maternal environmental factors as predictors of the incidence of gastroenteritis among under-five children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State. Materials and Methods: A descriptive study was carried out in two state-owned hospitals between April and August 2019 using...

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Main Authors: Oluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi, B O Ogundele, Olasunkanmi Rowland Adeleke, Joseph Sunday Adegboro, Rachael Seun Oluwadare
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Medicine Osijek 2021-04-01
Series:Southeastern European Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://seemedj.mefos.unios.hr/index.php/seemedj/article/view/170/97
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spelling doaj-edac2a9890c84e758e05d22bf0a40d462021-04-30T09:12:31ZengFaculty of Medicine OsijekSoutheastern European Medical Journal2459-94842021-04-0151374610.26332/seemedj.v5i1.170Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo StateOluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi0B O Ogundele1Olasunkanmi Rowland Adeleke2Joseph Sunday Adegboro3Rachael Seun Oluwadare4Department of Human Kinetics and Health Education, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba - Akoko , NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, University of Ibadan , NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba - Akoko, NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba - Akoko, NigeriaDepartment of Human Kinetics and Health Education, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba - Akoko, NigeriaAim: To examine maternal environmental factors as predictors of the incidence of gastroenteritis among under-five children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State. Materials and Methods: A descriptive study was carried out in two state-owned hospitals between April and August 2019 using a purposive and convenience sample of 120 mothers of under-five children. Data collected were analyzed using PPMC and regression to test the hypotheses at 0.05 alpha level. Results: The study shows that three out of four environmental predictors were potent predictors of the incidence of gastroenteritis. They include: quality of water source (β = .387, t = 7.638, P < 0.05), method of sewage disposal (β = .508, t = 9.651, P < 0.05) and hygienic practices (β = .341, t = -6.799, P < 0.05), while area of residence (β = -.048, t = 1.008, P > 0.05) was not a potent predictor. Area of residence, quality of water source, hygienic practices and method of sewage disposal had a significant joint contribution used to predict the incidence of gastroenteritis. Conclusion: Area of residence, quality of water source, hygienic practices and method of sewage disposal all increase the incidence of gastroenteritis when proper attention is not paid to them. Education about handwashing is necessary for mothers and environmental health workers in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, and the Ministry of Environment should ensure that every house has the proper means to dispose of sewage, especially a septic tank (flush toilet); this will help reduce the disposal of feces in the environment.http://seemedj.mefos.unios.hr/index.php/seemedj/article/view/170/97gastroenteritisenvironmentmothersinfection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi
B O Ogundele
Olasunkanmi Rowland Adeleke
Joseph Sunday Adegboro
Rachael Seun Oluwadare
spellingShingle Oluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi
B O Ogundele
Olasunkanmi Rowland Adeleke
Joseph Sunday Adegboro
Rachael Seun Oluwadare
Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
Southeastern European Medical Journal
gastroenteritis
environment
mothers
infection
author_facet Oluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi
B O Ogundele
Olasunkanmi Rowland Adeleke
Joseph Sunday Adegboro
Rachael Seun Oluwadare
author_sort Oluwaseyi Oye Olofintuyi
title Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
title_short Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
title_full Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
title_fullStr Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Environmental Factors as Predictors of Occurrence of Gastroenteritis among Under - five Children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State
title_sort maternal environmental factors as predictors of occurrence of gastroenteritis among under - five children in akure south local government area, ondo state
publisher Faculty of Medicine Osijek
series Southeastern European Medical Journal
issn 2459-9484
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Aim: To examine maternal environmental factors as predictors of the incidence of gastroenteritis among under-five children in Akure South Local Government Area, Ondo State. Materials and Methods: A descriptive study was carried out in two state-owned hospitals between April and August 2019 using a purposive and convenience sample of 120 mothers of under-five children. Data collected were analyzed using PPMC and regression to test the hypotheses at 0.05 alpha level. Results: The study shows that three out of four environmental predictors were potent predictors of the incidence of gastroenteritis. They include: quality of water source (β = .387, t = 7.638, P < 0.05), method of sewage disposal (β = .508, t = 9.651, P < 0.05) and hygienic practices (β = .341, t = -6.799, P < 0.05), while area of residence (β = -.048, t = 1.008, P > 0.05) was not a potent predictor. Area of residence, quality of water source, hygienic practices and method of sewage disposal had a significant joint contribution used to predict the incidence of gastroenteritis. Conclusion: Area of residence, quality of water source, hygienic practices and method of sewage disposal all increase the incidence of gastroenteritis when proper attention is not paid to them. Education about handwashing is necessary for mothers and environmental health workers in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, and the Ministry of Environment should ensure that every house has the proper means to dispose of sewage, especially a septic tank (flush toilet); this will help reduce the disposal of feces in the environment.
topic gastroenteritis
environment
mothers
infection
url http://seemedj.mefos.unios.hr/index.php/seemedj/article/view/170/97
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