| Literature DB >> 27428069 |
Philip Baba Adongo1, Philip Teg-Nefaah Tabong1, Emmanuel Asampong1, Joana Ansong2, Magda Robalo2, Richard M Adanu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) is a condition with high fatality. Though the disease is deadly, taking precautions to reduce contact with infected people and their secretions can prevent cross- infection. In the 2014 EVD outbreak, socio-cultural factors were identified to be responsible for the spread of the disease in the three most affected countries in West Africa. In this light, we undertook this study to identify socio-cultural factors that may influence the prevention and containment of EVD in Ghana and ways to address such practices.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27428069 PMCID: PMC4948768 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Map showing study areas and borders with neighbouring countries.
High-risk funeral and burial practices in Ghana.
| Region | Care of the corpse | Funeral practices | Burial practices |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bathing the dead | Sharing cigarette and drinks with the dead | Holding the body of dead during burial | |
| Performing ablution | Hand Shaking | Burying deaths that occur at home without autopsy | |
| Bathing the dead | Use of handkerchief to wipe discharges from the dead | Holding the body of dead during burial | |
| Performing ablution | Widows rites | Burying deaths that occur at home without autopsy | |
| Drinking water used to rinse the dead | |||
| Sharing cigarette and drinks with the dead | |||
| Handshaking | |||
| Bathing the dead | Use of handkerchief to wipe discharges from the dead | Holding the body of dead during burial | |
| Performing ablution | Handshaking | Burying deaths that occur at home without autopsy | |
| Bathing the dead | Use of handkerchief to wipe discharges from the dead | Holding the body of dead during burial | |
| Performing ablution | Handshaking | Burying deaths that occur at home without autopsy | |
| Bathing the dead | Use of handkerchief to wipe discharges from the dead | Holding the body of dead during burial | |
| Performing ablution | Throwing money at the dead which get contaminated by discharges from the dead | Burying deaths that occur at home without autopsy | |
| Handshaking | |||
| Bathing children with water used to rinse the body of the dead | |||
| Allowing children to drink the water used to rinse the body of the dead |
Fig 2Socio-cultural practices and its influence on EVD-related risk.
Fig 3Diagrammatic representation of health seeking behaviour and strategies to contain EVD during an outbreak.