Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa

Thesis (MPH. (Health Measurement)) --University of Limpopo, 2012 === The purpose of this study was to establish the community’s knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services (EHS) in the informal settlement of Hospital Hill. A qualitative, cross-sectional study was condu...

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Main Author: Tjale, Lydia Mmapula
Other Authors: Swart, A
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10386/1277
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ul-oai-ulspace.ul.ac.za-10386-12772019-10-30T04:06:38Z Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa Tjale, Lydia Mmapula Swart, A Matlala, S. F. Attitudes Disease prevention Environmental health Environmental health Health services Environmental protection Thesis (MPH. (Health Measurement)) --University of Limpopo, 2012 The purpose of this study was to establish the community’s knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services (EHS) in the informal settlement of Hospital Hill. A qualitative, cross-sectional study was conducted using focus group discussions among study participants that satisfied the inclusion criteria. Each focus group discussion had varying duration ranging from one hour to one-and-half hours. The study revealed that there was lack of knowledge about EHS, with participants citing provision of water and sanitation facilities as the various roles that EHPs played. Participants’ attitude towards EHS and EHPs showed marked dissatisfaction due to their inaccessibility and unavailability. The lack of consultation, follow-up and community initiatives fuelled their negative attitudes towards EHS. Culture and beliefs, school dropout, human resources and lack of access to information discouraged the community from using EHS. A number of suggestions were made which revealed the community’s need and desire for EHS provision because environmental health problems were dealt with in different ways and these varied from one household to the other further signifying the need for a uniform approach was needed to deal with environmental health problems. The community of Hospital Hill was found to be experiencing discrimination evidenced by inexistence of EHS and consequent limited knowledge of EHS, negative attitudes and practices regarding EHS. 2015-09-16T08:18:03Z 2015-09-16T08:18:03Z 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10386/1277 en PDF xiv, 99 leaves
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Attitudes
Disease prevention
Environmental health
Environmental health
Health services
Environmental protection
spellingShingle Attitudes
Disease prevention
Environmental health
Environmental health
Health services
Environmental protection
Tjale, Lydia Mmapula
Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
description Thesis (MPH. (Health Measurement)) --University of Limpopo, 2012 === The purpose of this study was to establish the community’s knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services (EHS) in the informal settlement of Hospital Hill. A qualitative, cross-sectional study was conducted using focus group discussions among study participants that satisfied the inclusion criteria. Each focus group discussion had varying duration ranging from one hour to one-and-half hours. The study revealed that there was lack of knowledge about EHS, with participants citing provision of water and sanitation facilities as the various roles that EHPs played. Participants’ attitude towards EHS and EHPs showed marked dissatisfaction due to their inaccessibility and unavailability. The lack of consultation, follow-up and community initiatives fuelled their negative attitudes towards EHS. Culture and beliefs, school dropout, human resources and lack of access to information discouraged the community from using EHS. A number of suggestions were made which revealed the community’s need and desire for EHS provision because environmental health problems were dealt with in different ways and these varied from one household to the other further signifying the need for a uniform approach was needed to deal with environmental health problems. The community of Hospital Hill was found to be experiencing discrimination evidenced by inexistence of EHS and consequent limited knowledge of EHS, negative attitudes and practices regarding EHS.
author2 Swart, A
author_facet Swart, A
Tjale, Lydia Mmapula
author Tjale, Lydia Mmapula
author_sort Tjale, Lydia Mmapula
title Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
title_short Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
title_full Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
title_fullStr Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in Hospital Hill, Johannesburg Metropolitan Council, South Africa
title_sort knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding environmental health services in hospital hill, johannesburg metropolitan council, south africa
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10386/1277
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