| Literature DB >> 29721141 |
Moise Chi Ngwa1, Alyson Young2, Song Liang3,4, Jason Blackburn3,5, Arabi Mouhaman6, John Glenn Morris3,7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In recent years, the Far North Region of Cameroon has experienced serious and recurrent cholera outbreaks. Yet, understanding of cultural influences on outbreaks and spread remain poorly understood. This qualitative study explored cultural influences on cholera exposure in this region.Entities:
Keywords: Cameroon; Culture; Far North; cholera; etiology; practices; spread
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29721141 PMCID: PMC5927557 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2017.28.311.13860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1Spatial (A and B) and temporal (C and D) distribution of cholera attack rate per 100,000 inhabitants in the North and Far North Regions, Cameroon, 2009-2010. In 2009, cholera was limited in the Far North (A) and (C); in 2010, it started in the North and spread to the Far North (B) and (D); the case fatality ratio (red dashed line of C and D) far exceeded 50% at the start of the epidemic in both years.
Figure 2Locations of focused group discussion and house hold discussions (red dots) during phase II of the study; the map shows Far North is a diverse terrain. The western portion is mountainous (purple line) while the eastern portion contains the Logon and Chari floodplains (blue color); reported cholera cases are higher in the mountainous terrain than in the floodplains terrain
Figure 3Some environmental conditions and cultural aspects that influence cholera exposure transmission: The community sources water from A potholes (top), ponds (bottom), and B open wells (everyone uses the yellow container in B to draw water), hallmarks of risky water sources. Group eating out of the same bowl using fingers C is a culture that can aid rapid cholera transmission and spread while water is transported D in open-mounthed containers, as explained by our Key Informant E (Key Informant—right, interviewers—left), and stored in open-mouthed jars F called ‘caneri’, placed at strategic locations from which all can dip water using a common cup (blue cup in the middle jar of F). Water driven travel (contact between folks from mountain and valley) in D could underlie rapid disease transmission. The Figure shows the environment, which together with culture, shape behavior that leads to cholera exposure.