| Literature DB >> 26362937 |
Gloria M Mulenga1, Rosemary N Likwa2, Boniface Namangala3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) is a neglected tropical disease affecting poor rural communities living in tsetse-infested regions of sub-Saharan Africa. In Zambia, sporadic cases of HAT have been reported mainly in the old foci along the tsetse-infested Luangwa river valley in north-eastern part of the country. In such places where malaria is the major endemic febrile disease, with possibilities of co-infections of HAT and malaria and where the levels of alertness to the presence of HAT among health care personnel (HCP) is low, there is a high chance of misdiagnosing HAT for malaria because of their similarities in clinical presentation. This study, conducted in Zambia's tsetse-infested rural health centres (RHCs) of Chama and Mambwe districts, was designed to investigate the staffing levels, the HCP levels of alertness to the occurrence of HAT and their capacity to detect the disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26362937 PMCID: PMC4567820 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-015-1403-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Map of Zambia showing location of the districts and health centres visited. Source CSO-Geographic Information Systems Unit
Level of education of health care personnel involved in the study
| District | University | College | Secondary only | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chama | 2 (3.8 %) | 39 (75.0 %) | 11 (21.2 %) | 52 |
| Mambwe | 3 (6.1 %) | 44 (89.8 %) | 2 (4.1 %) | 49 |
| Total | 5 (5.0 %) | 83 (82.2 %) | 13 (12. 9 %) | 101 |
Occupation of health care personnel involved in the study
| District | Medical officers | Clinical officers | Nurses | Environmental health technicians | Laboratory technicians | Othera | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chama | 2 (3.8 %) | 7 (3.5 %) | 22 (42.3 %) | 5 (9.6 %) | 4 (7.7 %) | 12 (23.0 %) | 52 |
| Mambwe | 2 (4.1 %) | 3 (6.1 %) | 31 (63.3 %) | 4 (8.1 %) | 6 (12.2 %) | 3 (6.1 %) | 49 |
| Total | 4 (4.0 %) | 10 (9.9 %) | 53 (52.5 %) | 9 (8.9 %) | 10 (9.9 %) | 15 (14.8 %) | 101 |
aCommunity health assistants and professions not specified in the various staff categories
Health care personnel’s knowledge of various signs and symptoms associated with HAT
| Series | Parameter | Chama district (responses) | Mambwe district (responses) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes (%) | No (%) | Yes (%) | No (%) | ||
| 1 | Abnormal sleep | 41 (78.8) | 10 (21.2) | 39 (79.6) | 10 (20.4) |
| 2 | Fever | 39 (75.0) | 13 (25.0) | 36 (73.5) | 13 (26.5) |
| 3 | Body pains | 25 (48.1) | 27 (51.9) | 21 (42.9) | 28 (57.1) |
| 4 | Headache | 27 (51.9) | 25 (48.1) | 22 (44.9) | 27 (55.1) |
| 5 | Lymph node enlargement | 13 (25.0) | 39 (75.0) | 11 (22.4) | 38 (77.6) |
| 6 | Microscopy | 26 (50.0) | 26 (50.0) | 27 (55.1) | 22 (44.9) |