| Literature DB >> 25519882 |
Leah Scandurra1, Angela Acosta, Hannah Koenker, Daniel Musoke Kibuuka, Steven Harvey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prolonging net durability has important implications for reducing both malaria transmission and the frequency of net replacement. Protective behaviour, such as net care and repair, offers promise for improving net integrity and durability. Given the potential cost-savings and public health benefit associated with extending the useful life of long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs), prevention and mitigation of damage will become ever more critical to ensuring adequate net coverage at the population level.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25519882 PMCID: PMC4301822 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Net care and repair in Uganda study timeline.
Study design
| Data collection method | Participant profile | N | N | N |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kaliro | Serere | Total (combined) | ||
| Household visit IDI | Male net user | 5 | 5 | 10 |
| Household visit IDI | Female net user | 5 | 5 | 10 |
| Household visit IDI | Female net user w/child under 5 | 5 | 5 | 10 |
| Photo exercises | All participants | 15 | 15 | 30 |
| Photographs | All participants | 15 | 15 | 30 |
| Video | All participants | 15 | 15 | 30 |
| Observations | All participants | 15 | 15 | 30 |
Demographic characteristics: by district and combined
| Characteristics | Kaliro | Serere | Total (combined) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Male | 5 (17) | 5 (17) | 10 (34) |
| Female | 10 (33) | 10 (33) | 20 (67) |
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| |||
| ≤19 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| 20-29 | 6 (20) | 1 (3) | 7 (23) |
| 30-39 | 3 (10) | 5 (17) | 8 (27) |
| 40-49 | 1 (3) | 4 (13) | 5 (17) |
| 50+ | 4 (13) | 5 (17) | 9 (30) |
| Don’t know | 1 (3) | 0 (0) | 1 (0) |
| Mean age totals | 40 | 45 | 42.5 |
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| |||
| Mean number of children under 5 | 1.6 | 1.6 | 1.6 |
| Mean household size | 7.6 | 6.8 | 7.2 |
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| Grass/papyrus/banana/thatch | 5 (33) | 4 (27) | 9 (30) |
| Zinc/iron/tile | 10 (67) | 11 (73) | 21 (70) |
|
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| Grass/mud | 5 (33) | 4 (27) | 9 (30) |
| Plaster/brick | 10 (67) | 11 (73) | 21 (70) |
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| Earth/sand/clay | 4 (47) | 9 (60) | 13 (43) |
| Wood/bamboo/palm | 3 (10) | 0 (0) | 3 (10) |
| Vinyl/tile/cement | 8 (53) | 6 (40) | 14 (47) |
|
| |||
| Subsistence agriculture | 7 (23) | 6 (20) | 13 (43) |
| Commercial agriculture | 2 (7) | 1 (3) | 3 (10) |
| Business owner | 6 (20) | 4 (13) | 10 (33) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 4 (13) | 4 (13) |
|
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| Primary | 9 (30) | 6 (20) | 15 (50) |
| Secondary | 2 (7) | 2 (7) | 4 (13) |
| Higher | 2 (7) | 4 (13) | 6 (20) |
| None | 2 (7) | 3 (10) | 5 (17) |
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| |||
| Mean number of nets in household | 2.1 | 3.3 | 2.7 |
Barriers and facilitators to net care and repair (as mentioned by respondents)
| Behaviour | Motivators/facilitators | Barriers |
|---|---|---|
| Repairing a net | • Perceived risk of malaria due to holes | • Holes are too big or too many |
| • Belief that mosquitoes can enter even a small hole | • Prefer to replace with new net if affordable | |
| • To save money on new nets or malaria treatment | • Duration (how long the repair would take; sewing or patching seen as slow) | |
| • Desire to be perceived as responsible and conscientious | • Potential unattractiveness of repair (distortion due to knotting, neatness of sewing, color of material and thread used) | |
| • Having a net that looks good (strong dislike of nets with holes) | • Not mentioned: Lack of materials, inability to sew, lack of knowledge of how to repair | |
| • Perception that repair can be fast and easy; especially knotting and tying off holes | ||
| • Awareness that small holes can get bigger | ||
| • Not having enough money to obtain a new net | ||
| • Realizing that a net that would have been considered unusable can still be used if repaired | ||
| • Needle, threat, and patching materials easily available at low to no cost | ||
| • How long the repair would last (sewing and patching seen as longer-lasting, knotting as quick to unravel) | ||
| • Men appear to approve of their wives caring for and repairing nets | ||
| Washing a net | Motivators for NOT washing frequently: | Barriers to NOT washing frequently: |
| • Frequent washing could cause holes | • Desire to be perceived as a clean and responsible person | |
| • Older nets more likely to tear during washing | • Frequent washing/cleanliness perceived as good care | |
| • Cost of soap (a few participants) | • Believing nets should be treated like clothes and washed following the laundry schedule | |
| • Understanding that frequent washing can reduce effectiveness of the ‘medicine’ in the net | • Belief that dirty nets could cause disease | |
| • Household factors like bedwetting and dirt floors | ||
| • Confusion about proper washing instructions | ||
| • Lack of proper washing instruction at distribution | ||
| Tying up a net or storing it when not in use | • Recognized as a good ‘routine’ | • Tiring to do daily |
| • Prevent damage to nets by children | • Easy to forget | |
| • Neat appearance | • Busy with morning rush to work/fields | |
| • Heads of households (men and women both) appear to approve in principle |
Care and repair recommendations (based upon barriers and motivators identified by respondents and research findings)
| Care behaviour | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| Tying up a net or storing it when not in use | • Promote storing or tying up as an easy daily routine done by responsible, caring individuals that takes little to no time |
| • Involve children and other household members | |
| Washing nets | • Emphasize proper washing practices and frequency – wash net 3–4 times a year in a basin or bucket with water and mild soap, not detergent or bleach |
| • Position nets as special, not to be treated like clothes, to be washed infrequently to protect the “medicine” | |
| • Keep nets tied up and/or stored when not in use to prevent dirt | |
| • Consider procuring coloured nets since they are less likely to show dirt | |
| • Manufacturers develop nets with insecticides that can stand a greater number of washes | |
| • Conduct trials of improved practices to explore how households can make washing less damaging and frequent | |
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|
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| Repair (sewing, patching, knotting) | • Promote benefits of repair: malaria prevention purposes; saving money on purchasing a new net and on treatment for malaria |
| • Emphasize the ease and short time required to repair small holes | |
| • Emphasize checking nets for holes routinely and repairing small holes immediately | |
| • Raise perceived dangers of delaying net repair: risk of malaria, financial costs of nets and treatment | |
| • Position repair as an intelligent and efficient use of resources | |
| • Position those who repair as responsible people who care for their family’s well-being and for having an attractive net and a well-kept home | |
| • Promote people who repair as people who are worthy of being appreciated and recognized | |
| • Create a norm of repairing by making it public (e.g., net repair as part of school homework) |