A Study of awareness of malaria among Kibera population; implication for community based intervention

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Muthwii, Samson M.
dc.contributor.author Karanja, J.
dc.contributor.author Wambari, E.
dc.contributor.author Okumu, D.
dc.contributor.author Odhiambo, E.
dc.contributor.author Karuri, I.
dc.contributor.author Kibe, M.
dc.contributor.author Osawa, N.
dc.contributor.author Osaki, Y.
dc.date.accessioned 2014-12-01T06:17:21Z
dc.date.available 2014-12-01T06:17:21Z
dc.date.issued 2002
dc.identifier.citation journal of the national institute of public health 51 (1) : 2002 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://www.ku.ac.ke/schools/education/images/stories/research/A%20Study%20of%20awareness%20of%20malaria%20among%20Kibera%20population.pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/249
dc.description.abstract Objective; To determine awareness of spread, pre-disposing factors, control and effects of malaria in Kibera slums, to facilitate designing community based interventions. Design; Cross-sectional study Setting; Gatwikira Village, Kibera Division, Nairobi Subjects; 160 households (80% response rate) by stratified systematic sampling. Main outcome measures; Awareness of malaria as disease, symptoms, relationship to vector, predisposing factors, prevention and control measures, burden of disease and health seeking behaviour. Results; All respondents demonstrated awareness of malaria as disease. Main symptoms associated with malaria were fever (91%), headache (67%), joint pains (51%) and malaise (48%). Majority associated malaria with mosquito vector (72%) but a larger number (76%) with erroneous causative factors. Predisposing factors were mosquito bleeding sites due to poorly disposed refuse (53%), rains (28%), stagnant water (11%) and bushes (11%). Awareness of prevention and control measures included destroying mosquito breeding sites (39%), insecticides use (38%), prophylactic drugs (32%) and mosquito nets (29%). 9% did not know of any control measures while 33% gave erroneous measures. For health seeking behaviour, 87% went to health institutions for treatment while 62% purchase over-the-counter drugs (self-medicaion). Most felt effects as burden of disease were draining of households’ resources (76%) and work absenteeism (50%). Conclusions; The community is aware of malaria as a disease but are handicapped by lack of adequate knowledge on symptoms, cause, predisposing factors, prevention and control measures. There is urgent need for health education and cost-effective sustainable community based intervention activities for the prevention, control and curative management of malaria. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject malaria en_US
dc.subject symptoms en_US
dc.subject predisposing factors en_US
dc.subject prevention en_US
dc.title A Study of awareness of malaria among Kibera population; implication for community based intervention en_US
dc.type Article en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search Dspace


Browse

My Account