Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia
This study investigated the implementation of the roll back malaria (RBM) programme at household and at health post levels and examined factors that negatively impact on malaria prevention and control activities. Quantitative, descriptive, analytic crosssectional research, guided by the conceptual...
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Online Access: | Kassa, Dejene Hailu (2014) Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-187992016-05-11T03:57:15Z Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia Dejene Haila Kassa Van Der Wal, D.M Health Belief Model Health Extension Worker Household Survey Malaria in Ethiopia Plasmodium Falciparum Roll back Malaria Programme 616.936200963 Malaria -- Treatment -- Ethiopia Malaria -- Ethiopia -- Prevention This study investigated the implementation of the roll back malaria (RBM) programme at household and at health post levels and examined factors that negatively impact on malaria prevention and control activities. Quantitative, descriptive, analytic crosssectional research, guided by the conceptual framework of the Health Belief Model, was conducted. Structured interviews were conducted with 857 women (for the household survey in phase 1) and 53 health extension workers (HEWs) in phase 2 of the study, in nine malaria endemic districts of Sidama Zone, southern Ethiopia. Data were analysed using SPSS version 20. The study’s findings indicate that 53.3% (n=457) of the household respondents and 24.5% (n=13) of the HEWs had low levels of overall malaria-related knowledge. Household respondents aged 25-34 years, (p<0.01); regularly received malaria-related information, (p<0.001) and the less poor women (p<0.001) had good levels of knowledge. Of the households, 38.9% (n=333) reported poor RBM practices. Wealth, knowledge, perceived threat of malaria and perceived benefits of implementing malaria preventive measures were positively associated with good RBM practices. Indoor residual spraying (63.6%; 422 out of 664), consistent use of insecticide treated bed nets (51.6%; 368 out of 713), and environmental sanitation (38.6%; 331 out of 857) were the most commonly implemented malaria prevention strategies in the study area. Out of the 252 reported malaria cases, 53.6% (n=135) occurred among children under five years of age who also comprised 50.0% (n=16) of 32 reported malaria-related deaths. The RBM practices were poorly implemented in the study area despite malaria prevention and control efforts. Slow progress in behavioural changes among household members, lack of transportation services for referring malaria patients, lack of support given to HEWs and lack of feedback and supervision from higher level health care facilities were identified as potential challenges facing RBM implementation in the study area. Future efforts need to focus on effective behavioural changes based on intervention studies and regular monitoring of the RBM programme. The workloads of the HEWs should also be reconsidered and lay health educators should be used more effectively. Health posts should always have sufficient anti-malaria drugs and other resource such as rapid diagnostic kits. Health Studies D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies) 2015-07-10T11:10:05Z 2015-07-10T11:10:05Z 2014-11 Thesis Kassa, Dejene Hailu (2014) Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799 en 1 electronic resource (xx, 229 leaves) : ill. |
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language |
en |
format |
Others
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sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
Health Belief Model Health Extension Worker Household Survey Malaria in Ethiopia Plasmodium Falciparum Roll back Malaria Programme 616.936200963 Malaria -- Treatment -- Ethiopia Malaria -- Ethiopia -- Prevention |
spellingShingle |
Health Belief Model Health Extension Worker Household Survey Malaria in Ethiopia Plasmodium Falciparum Roll back Malaria Programme 616.936200963 Malaria -- Treatment -- Ethiopia Malaria -- Ethiopia -- Prevention Dejene Haila Kassa Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
description |
This study investigated the implementation of the roll back malaria (RBM) programme at
household and at health post levels and examined factors that negatively impact on malaria prevention and control activities. Quantitative, descriptive, analytic crosssectional research, guided by the conceptual framework of the Health Belief Model, was conducted. Structured interviews were conducted with 857 women (for the household survey in phase 1) and 53 health extension workers (HEWs) in phase 2 of the study, in nine malaria endemic districts of Sidama Zone, southern Ethiopia. Data were analysed using SPSS version 20. The study’s findings indicate that 53.3% (n=457) of the household respondents and 24.5% (n=13) of the HEWs had low levels of overall malaria-related knowledge. Household respondents aged 25-34 years, (p<0.01); regularly received malaria-related information, (p<0.001) and the less poor women (p<0.001) had good levels of knowledge. Of the households, 38.9% (n=333) reported poor RBM practices. Wealth, knowledge, perceived threat of malaria and perceived benefits of implementing malaria preventive measures were positively associated with good RBM practices. Indoor residual spraying (63.6%; 422 out of 664), consistent use of insecticide treated bed nets (51.6%; 368 out of 713), and environmental sanitation (38.6%; 331 out of 857) were the most commonly implemented malaria prevention strategies in the study area. Out of the 252 reported malaria cases, 53.6% (n=135) occurred among children under five years of age who also comprised 50.0% (n=16) of 32 reported malaria-related deaths. The RBM practices were poorly implemented in the study area despite malaria prevention and control efforts. Slow progress in behavioural changes among household members, lack of transportation services for referring malaria patients, lack of support given to HEWs and lack of feedback and supervision from higher level health care facilities were
identified as potential challenges facing RBM implementation in the study area. Future
efforts need to focus on effective behavioural changes based on intervention studies
and regular monitoring of the RBM programme. The workloads of the HEWs should
also be reconsidered and lay health educators should be used more effectively. Health
posts should always have sufficient anti-malaria drugs and other resource such as rapid
diagnostic kits. === Health Studies === D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies) |
author2 |
Van Der Wal, D.M |
author_facet |
Van Der Wal, D.M Dejene Haila Kassa |
author |
Dejene Haila Kassa |
author_sort |
Dejene Haila Kassa |
title |
Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
title_short |
Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
title_full |
Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
title_fullStr |
Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia |
title_sort |
malaria prevention and control in ethiopia |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
Kassa, Dejene Hailu (2014) Malaria prevention and control in Ethiopia, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18799 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT dejenehailakassa malariapreventionandcontrolinethiopia |
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1718264454665207808 |