Assessing health-seeking behaviour and malaria prevention practices among communities in four districts of the Volta Region of Ghana

Verner N. Orish(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Raymond Saa-Eru Maalman(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Otchere Y. Donkor(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Barbara Yordanis Henandez Ceruantes(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Eric Osei(Yonsei University), Hubert Amu(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Prince Kubi Appiah(Yonsei University), Kennedy Diema Konlan(Yonsei University), Hadiru Mumuni(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Eunji Kim(Korea Foundation for International Healthcare), Siwoo Kim(Yonsei University), Hajun Jung(Yonsei University), Jones Ofori-Amoah(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Philip Kofie(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Martin Adjuik(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Robert Kaba Alhassan(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Ernestina Donkor(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Francis Bruno Zottor(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Margaret Kweku(University of Health and Allied Sciences), Paul Amuna(University of Health and Allied Sciences), So Yoo Kim(Yonsei University), John O. Gyapong(University of Health and Allied Sciences), the UHAS-Yonsei Project Team
Malaria Journal
November 27, 2021
Cited by 16Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Malaria is a preventable disease that causes huge morbidity and mortality in malaria-endemic areas, especially among children and pregnant women. The malaria control programme focuses on the prevention of mosquito bites using insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) and mosquito aerosol sprays and coils, as well as prevention of severe disease among those infected through prompt and adequate treatment. The success of the malaria control programme in Ghana is dependent on the malaria prevention practices of people in the community. Therefore, this study evaluated the malaria prevention practices of participants in four districts of the Volta Region of Ghana. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study conducted in Ketu South, Nkwanta South, Hohoe Municipality and Ho West districts of the Volta Region of Ghana. Questionnaire were administered to adults who consented to each household visited. Questions were asked on the socio-demographics and malaria prevention practices of the households. Data analysis was done using SPSS version 23 with frequency distribution done for all the variables. Pearson chi-square was used to determine the significant association between socio-demographics and malaria prevention practices, and Multivariate nominal logistic regression analysis was used to model the relationship between dichotomous dependent variables (ITN ownership and usage) and independent variables. RESULTS: Out of the 2493 participants; 2234 (89.6%) owned ITN and 1528 (68.4%) used ITN a night before this study, 768 (30.8%) used mosquito aerosol spray and 368 (15%) used mosquito coil. More females significantly owned ITN than males (1293, 92.4%, p ≤ 0.001). Participants from Ketu South had 1.5 times higher odds of owning an ITN compared to Ho West whose odds are not different from Nkwanta South or Hohoe (AOR, 1.56 [95% 1.09-2.22]; p = 0.01). In terms of ITN usage, participants in Nkwanta South were less likely to use ITN compared to the other districts; AOR, 0.434 [95% CI 0.31-0.62, p < 0.001]. Also, of the 668 participants that had a fever within the past 3 days, 268 (40.1%) visited a patent medicine store and 156 (23.4%) visited health facilities. CONCLUSION: There is high ownership of ITNs, but relatively low utilization among the community members. Education on malaria prevention practices should be intensified and continuous among the population of the Volta Region to ensure the success of malaria control in the region.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis