| Literature DB >> 29955301 |
Alice Ncube1, Andries J Jordaan1, Beverly M Mabela1.
Abstract
The study assessed the knowledge, attitudes and practices of cholera prevention and preparedness in Ga-Mampuru village (Limpopo, South Africa). Interviewers collected data using a two-pronged method, namely a household questionnaire (open- and closed-ended questions) to assess knowledge and attitudes about cholera and observations to assess practices in the prevention and management of the disease. Additionally, interviewers took pictures with the respondents' permission. Ninety-six respondents were interviewed. Most respondents (86%) indicated they knew how cholera was contracted with 84% indicating contaminated water as a source. Ninety percent of the respondents indicated they knew how to prevent contracting cholera. All respondents generally knew that cholera could be treated with medicine received at a health-care facility or worker. Fewer respondents (58%) had specific knowledge such as the use of rehydration solutions. The respondents' high level of prevention practices could be biased. Interviewers observed that many practices were not adhered to, like not washing hands, not using toilet paper and throwing waste in respondents' yards. Therefore, the community of Ga-Mampuru had not reached a stage of adequate cholera prevention and preparedness in spite of the fact that they were aware of cholera risks and risk-reduction measures.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 29955301 PMCID: PMC6014007 DOI: 10.4102/jamba.v8i2.164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Jamba ISSN: 1996-1421
FIGURE 1Cholera outbreak in the Greater Tubatse Municipality, 2008–2009.
Respondents’ demographics.
| Demographic | Category | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 18–29 | 19 |
| 30–39 | 16 | |
| 40–49 | 18 | |
| 50–59 | 18 | |
| 60 > | 29 | |
| Education | No schooling | 26 |
| Preschool | 2 | |
| Primary school | 10 | |
| Secondary school without Grade 12 | 22 | |
| Secondary school with Grade 12 | 20 | |
| Tertiary education | 20 | |
| Living in Ga-Mampuru village (years) | 0–2 | 0 |
| 3–5 | 2 | |
| 6–10 | 4.2 | |
| 11–20 | 9.4 | |
| 20 > | 84.4 | |
| Household income (ZAR) | No income | 6 |
| < R1000 | 16 | |
| R1001–R2000 | 43 | |
| R2001–R3000 | 8 | |
| R3001–R4000 | 4 | |
| R4000 > | 23 |
Respondents’ information sources on cholera prevention.
| Source | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Health workers | 54 |
| Radio | 44 |
| Newspaper | 36 |
| Television | 34 |
| Brochures, posters and other printed material | 20 |
| Magazines | 17 |
| Teachers | 13 |
| Family members, friends, neighbours and colleagues | 13 |
| Church | 7 |
| Traditional leaders | 2 |
| Disaster management officials | 0 |
n = 91.
Multiples responses possible.
Respondents’ knowledge on contracting cholera.
| Question† | Knowledge of contracting cholera (percentage yes responses) |
|---|---|
| Drinking water from contaminated source | 84 |
| Drinking water that became contaminated during transportation | 50 |
| Eating food contaminated during or after preparation | 41 |
| Eating fruit that were not peeled or washed | 29 |
| Ingesting faeces and vomit | 18 |
| Witchcraft | 4 |
n = 83.
†, Multiples responses possible.
Respondents’ knowledge on how to prevent contracting cholera.
| Question† | Prevention measures (% yes responses) |
|---|---|
| Boiling water for at least five minutes | 98 |
| Storing water in a clean container | 96 |
| Using clean toilets | 85 |
| Washing your hands thoroughly | 82 |
| Drinking water only from an uncontaminated source | 76 |
| Washing food with uncontaminated water | 65 |
| Disposing of human waste | 54 |
| Cooking food or reheating it thoroughly | 48 |
| Washing household surfaces and utensils with clean water | 46 |
| Avoiding uncooked food unless it can be peeled or shelled | 37 |
| Eating food while it is still hot | 17 |
| Praying | 9 |
| Consulting a traditional healer | 4 |
n = 86.
†, Multiples responses possible.
Respondents’ knowledge of cholera treatment.
| Question† | Prevention measures (% yes responses) |
|---|---|
| Specific medicine given by clinic, hospital or health worker | 100 |
| Herbal remedies | 94 |
| Homemade oral rehydration solution | 58 |
| Prayer | 2 |
| Traditional medicines | 1 |
| Home rest without remedies | 0 |
n = 96.
†, Multiples responses possible.
The availability of amenities and goods and personal hygiene practices of respondents.
| Amenities, goods, personal hygiene practices | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|
| Communal tap | 75 |
| Private tap | 27 |
| River | 23 |
| Rain | 2 |
| Both narrow- and wide-mouthed containers | 68 |
| Wide-mouthed containers | 17 |
| Narrow-mouthed containers | 15 |
| Chlorination | 35 |
| Boiling | 33 |
| Cloth filtration | 31 |
| Simple sand filtration | 3 |
| Sedimentation | 0 |
| Sun exposure | 0 |
| Toilet | 93 |
| Toilet paper | 77 |
| Soap for hand-washing purposes | 71 |
| Household chlorine bleach | 61 |
| Plastic garbage bags | 25 |
| Disinfectant | 20 |
| Scooper for pet waste | 18 |
| Wash food with safe water | 98 |
| Wash utensils with clean water | 90 |
| Cook food or reheat it thoroughly | 68 |
| Avoid uncooked food unless it can be peeled or shelled | 61 |
| Eat food while it is still hot | 52 |
| Not eat uncovered food | 52 |
| Wash hands with soap before handling or preparing food | 98 |
| Wash hands with soap before eating food | 97 |
| Wash hands with soap after using the toilet | 95 |
| Wash hands with soap before feeding children | 92 |
| Wash hand with soap after attending a funeral | 90 |
| Wash hands after changing a diaper or cleaning a child who has gone to the bathroom | 85 |
| Defecate in toilet | 83 |
| Dispose of human waste promptly | 75 |
| Dispose of rubbish and covering it | 72 |
| Wash hands with soap before treating a wound | 70 |
| Wash hands with soap after handling uncooked food | 70 |
| Wash hands after handling garbage | 65 |
| Wash hands after blowing nose or coughing or sneezing | 57 |
n = 96.
†, Multiples responses possible.
Summary of interviewers’ general observations.
| Practices | Observation |
|---|---|
| The availability and use of toilets | Seven participants indicated that they did not have toilets, and the interviewers confirmed that, of the seven, five toilets were full and could not be used anymore ( |
| Hand-washing practices | Many respondents were observed not washing hands beforeeating in spite of reporting the contrary.Many children did not wash hands after using the toilet. |
| Water preservation or storage | Children drank water directly from big containers and used the same jug to fetch water. |
| Washing kitchen dishes | Dishes were washed outside of kitchens in dirty water ( |
| Water collection | Some community members were seen collecting water from the river with both wide-opened and narrow-opened containers with their feet inside the river and the hands touching the insides of the containers ( |
| Food handling and waste disposal | All respondents had waste thrown in their yards, a number included dirty baby diapers ( |