| Literature DB >> 27075575 |
Anthony K Mbonye1, Said M Mohamud2, James Bagonza2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria in pregnancy contributes greatly to maternal morbidity and mortality in Uganda. Thus it is urgent to identify possible barriers that limit access to existing interventions. The aim of this study was to assess perceptions and practices regarding malaria prevention during pregnancy in a peri-urban area and explore ways to scale-up malaria prevention interventions, since little is known about malaria in peri-urban settings.Entities:
Keywords: Malaria in pregnancy; Perceptions; Peri-urban; Practices; Sulphadoxine–pyrimethamine; Uganda
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27075575 PMCID: PMC4831145 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1246-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Socio-demographic characteristics of respondents
| Socio-demographic characteristics | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Mean age 29.8 range (16–49 yrs) | |
| Marital status | |
| Married | 701 (87.6) |
| Divorced | 32 (4.0 %) |
| Widowed | 17 (2.1 %) |
| Separated | 50 (6.3 %) |
| Educational level | |
| No education | 54 (6.8 %) |
| Primary | 297 (37.1 %) |
| Secondary | 187 (23.4 %) |
| Tertiary | 141 (17.6 %) |
| University | 120 (15.0 %) |
| Occupation | |
| Housewife | 155 (19.4 %) |
| Peasant farmer | 281 (35.1 %) |
| Trading/business | 207 (29.9 %) |
| Employed by the government | 109 (13.6 %) |
Knowledge and prevention practices on malaria in pregnancy
| Knowledge and prevention practices | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Knowledge on dangerous diseases in pregnancy | |
| Malaria | 769 (96.1 %) |
| HIV/AIDS | 469 (58.6 %) |
| Syphilis | 132 (16.5 %) |
| High blood pressure | 405 (50.6 %) |
| Diabetes | 135 (16.9 %) |
| Knowledge on the negative effects of malaria in pregnancy | |
| Anaemia | 482 (60.3 %) |
| Abortion | 359 (44.9 %) |
| Still births | 119 (14.9 %) |
| Poor health (general weakness) | 570 (71.3 %) |
| Antenatal care attendance | |
| Attended at least once in the last pregnancy | 538 (72.5 %) |
| Attended the recommended 4 visits | 102 (19.0 %) |
| Attended ANC at public facility | 451 (83.8 %) |
| Attended ANC at private facility | 87 (16.2 %) |
| Postnatal care attendance | |
| Attended after six weeks of delivery | 473 (59.1 %) |
| ITN Use | |
| Slept under and ITN a night before the interview | 628 (78.5 %) |
| Taken SP for malaria prevention | |
| Taken SP | 326 (40.8 %) |
| Taken the two recommended doses of SP | 159 (48.8 %) |
| Taken three doses of SP | 53 (16.3 %) |
| Taken four doses of SP | 15 (4.6 %) |
Reasons for not attending ANC and not taking SP as IPTp
| Frequency (%) | |
|---|---|
| Reason for not attending ANC | N = 262 |
| Was feeling healthy | 213 (81.3 %) |
| Was busy | 52 (19.9 %) |
| ANC clinic was too far | 193 (73.7 %) |
| Long waiting hours at the clinic | 136 (51.9 %) |
| Husband did not allow | 42 (16.0 %) |
| There is poor quality at the clinic | 27 (10.3 %) |
| Reasons for not taking SP for malaria prevention | N = 473 |
| Because I was sleeping under an ITN | 80 (16.9 %) |
| I was not sick | 170 (35.9 %) |
| The health unit was far | 123 (26.0 %) |
| There were no drugs at the ANC clinic | 68 (14.4 %) |
| I was not aware of the use of SP | 85 (18.0 %) |
| I did not have money | 65 (13.7 %) |
| The health worker was busy | 43 (9.1 %) |
| I feared side effects | 38 (8.0 %) |
| I used herbs | 25 (5.3 %) |