| Literature DB >> 14609458 |
Barry S Hewlett1, Richard P Amola.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14609458 PMCID: PMC3033100 DOI: 10.3201/eid0910.020493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Explanatory models for Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF) among the Acholia
| Terms |
|
| Disease of contact; Ebola |
|---|---|---|---|
| Description | “Medicine” or
substance that enters the body and causes illness | Bad spirit that comes suddenly and
rapidly and effects many people | EHF, biomedical description |
| Signs and symptoms | Starts with pain inflammation but can
have many other signs in later stages | Mental confusion, rapid death, high
fever | High fever, vomiting,
headache |
| Causes | Bad “medicine”
(poison) goes into body | Lack of respect for
| Filovirus, but host reservoir
unknown |
| Transmission | Step on it, eat it, catching it,
somebody sends, just looking at a person | Physical proximity, easy for
| Physical contact with bodily fluids of
patients |
| Pathophysiology | Inflammation and pain in area touched
by or location of | Attacks all of body | Damage to major organs |
| Treatment | Talk to | None, hydrate (ORS), control
vomiting | |
| Prevention and
control | Protective bracelets | See protocol in text, | Do not touch patients, barrier
nursing |
| Prognosis | Good if removed from body; otherwise
death | Not good, no cure | Not good, no cure |
| Risk groups | Very smart, successful, salaried
people; anybody | Caregivers close to patients (women),
families that do not respect | Unprotected healthcare workers,
caregivers of patients, people that wash or touch dead
victims |
| Political | Infected troops returning from DRC sent to Gulu | Infected troops returning from DRC sent to Gulu | Infected troops returning from DRC sent to Gulu |
aORS, oral rehydration salts; DRC, Democratic Republic of Congo.
How survivors thought they contracted Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF)a
| How survivors felt they acquired Ebola | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Men (n=22) | Women (n=38) | |
| Washing body of EHF
victim | 0 | 21 |
| Love touch | 32 | 11 |
| Transporting EHF
patient to hospital | 5 | 16 |
| Caregiving of EHF patient | 27 | 53 |
aMore than one response possible per informant.
Ways and locations in which Ebola survivors felt stigmatized
| Locations in which survivors felt stigmatized | % of
yes responses | |
|---|---|---|
| Men (n=22) | Women (n=38) | |
| Feared by others when you
returned to the community | 55 | 82 |
| Rejected at market or
store | 36 | 58 |
| Rejected at well or
borehole | 32 | 58 |
| Rejected when walking through neighborhood | 55 | 76 |
Community beliefs and practices that enhanced and lowered health of some persons during Gulu Ebola hemorrhagic fever outbreak
| Health enhancing | Health lowering |
|---|---|
| Indigenous protocol for
epidemics (see text) | Some aspects of burial and
funeral
practices: washing of body, dressing the body,
love touches, and ritual washing of hands in common bowl of
water |
| Elders sought to help organize the community | Transporting sick or dead by bike, cart,
or
other means |
| Some aspects of traditional healing practices, such as cutting of body to insert medicines |
Beliefs and practices of the national and international healthcare professionals that enhanced and lowered health of some persons during Gulu Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF) outbreak
| Health-enhancing beliefs and practices | Health-lowering beliefs and practices |
|---|---|
| Most national government
health workers and decision makers spoke local language and had an
understanding of local cultures | Unintended consequences of WHOa
health education video: burning of houses of survivors |
| Establishment of isolation
unit and use of barrier nursing | Taking bodies to burial ground before
family members could verify the death. This practice led to sick
persons hiding from family and health workers; family members being
afraid to take sick persons to hospital; persons running away from
the ambulance; and stories of Europeans selling body parts |
| Providing gloves and bleach to
local communities | Omitting traditional healers from control
efforts; they were ready and willing as a group to help mobilize the
community |
| Medical care of Ebola victims
including rehydration, control of vomiting,
other
drugs/medications | Early stages only: 1) nurses and
healthcare nurses lacked training about barrier nursing, protective
gear, and education about the transmission and nature of the
disease; 2) lack of transport for sick patients; 3) international
health workers not familiar with naming, kinship system, household
organization of local communities |
| Multidimensional health
education | Taking blood samples for research only or
blood taken without reporting results back to persons or
communities’ increased distrust of healthcare
workers |
| Suspension of the following
activities: handshaking upon greeting, cutting by traditional
healers, schools, discos, public funerals, traditional beer
drinking | International team members conducting EHF
studies for research only. This diverted time and energy from
control efforts |
| Diagnostic laboratories for
Ebola |
|
| Ambulances to transport
patients to hospital to isolate |
|
| Reallocation of tasks of
health workers to focus on EHF |
|
| Use of mobile teams to follow all contacts and provide health education, support for survivors and impacted families |
aWHO, World Health Organization; EHF, Ebola hemorrhagic fever.