| Literature DB >> 30954073 |
Kirsten Zalisk1, Samantha Herrera2,3, Uwem Inyang4, Audu Bala Mohammed5, Perpetua Uhomoibhi5, Yazoumé Yé2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To reduce the malaria burden in Nigeria, the National Malaria Strategic Plan (NMSP) 2014‒2020 calls for the scale-up of prevention and treatment interventions, including social and behaviour change (SBC). SBC interventions can increase awareness and improve the demand for and uptake of malaria interventions. However, there is limited evidence supporting the implementation of SBC interventions to improve key malaria behaviours, such as insecticide-treated bed net (ITN) use, among children in Nigeria.Entities:
Keywords: Insecticide-treated net use; Malaria prevention; Nigeria; Social and behavior change interventions; Sub-Saharan Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30954073 PMCID: PMC6451249 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-019-2750-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
ITN use among children under five by background characteristics
| Background characteristic | N | % (95% CI) | Chi square |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caregiver exposed to at least one ITN messagea |
| ||
| No | 1773 | 55.9 (52.7–59.1) | |
| Yes | 302 | 67.9 (61.4–73.8) | |
| Sex of child | 0.8894 | ||
| Male | 1057 | 58.1 (54.4–61.7) | |
| Female | 1018 | 57.7 (53.5–61.9) | |
| Age of child | 0.2991 | ||
| 0–11 months | 285 | 54.5 (46.4–62.3) | |
| 12–23 months | 603 | 57.9 (52.9–62.8) | |
| 24–35 months | 532 | 62.2 (57.1–67.0) | |
| 36–47 months | 384 | 54.1 (51.6–62.9) | |
| 48–59 months | 271 | 57.9 (46.6–61.4) | |
| Caregiver’s educational attainment |
| ||
| No formal education | 890 | 67.7 (63.3–71.9) | |
| Primary education | 365 | 54.9 (48.7–60.9) | |
| Secondary or higher education | 820 | 47.9 (43.6–51.9) | |
| Place of residence |
| ||
| Urban | 728 | 49.9 (44.8–55.1) | |
| Rural | 1347 | 62.0 (58.0–65.9) | |
| Wealth quintile |
| ||
| Highest | 393 | 40.5 (35.2–46.1) | |
| Fourth | 411 | 47.5 (41.6–53.6) | |
| Middle | 428 | 60.0 (54.5–65.3) | |
| Second | 444 | 67.3 (60.8–73.2) | |
| Lowest | 399 | 69.9 (64.0–75.3) | |
| Region |
| ||
| North Central | 363 | 60.7 (53.5–67.5) | |
| North East | 424 | 61.0 (55.1–66.6) | |
| North West | 596 | 70.5 (64.6–75.8) | |
| South East | 184 | 33.3 (24.0–44.1) | |
| South South | 250 | 45.4 (36.9–54.3) | |
| South West | 258 | 41.7 (35.8–47.8) | |
| Adequate number of ITNs in householdb |
| ||
| No | 1352 | 51.6 (48.3–55.0) | |
| Yes | 723 | 69.1 (64.4–73.5) | |
| Household owns radio | 0.2346 | ||
| No | 814 | 59.7 (55.2–64.1) | |
| Yes | 1261 | 56.7 (53.2–60.2) | |
| Household owns television |
| ||
| No | 1101 | 66.3 (61.9–70.3) | |
| Yes | 974 | 47.4 (43.6–51.2) | |
In Nigeria almost all ITNs are long-lasting insecticide-treated net (LLINs). The authors used the term ITN because the analysis was conducted using data on ITNs, which include LLINs and ITNs that have been soaked with insecticide within the past 12 months
ITN insecticide-treated bed net, CI confidence interval
p-values that are significant at the 0.05 level are italic
aDuring the 6 months preceding the survey
bHousehold owns at least one ITN for every two household members
Caregivers’ exposure to ITN messages and ITN use among children under five
| Background characteristic | Odds ratio (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| Predictor | ||
| Caregiver exposed to at least one ITN messagea | ||
| No | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Yes | 1.63 (1.24–2.15) |
|
| Covariates | ||
| Sex of child | ||
| Male | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Female | 0.95 (0.79–1.15) | 0.619 |
| Age of child | ||
| 0–11 months | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| 12–23 months | 0.96 (0.71–1.30) | 0.809 |
| 24–35 months | 1.05 (0.77–1.43) | 0.760 |
| 36–47 months | 0.86 (0.62–1.19) | 0.359 |
| 48–59 months | 0.87 (0.61–1.25) | 0.465 |
| Caregiver’s educational attainment | ||
| No formal education | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Primary education | 0.92 (0.69–1.22) | 0.556 |
| Secondary or higher education | 1.03 (0.77–1.37) | 0.844 |
| Place of residence | ||
| Urban | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Rural | 0.71 (0.55–0.93) |
|
| Wealth quintile | ||
| Highest | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Fourth | 1.48 (1.08–2.04) |
|
| Middle | 2.45 (1.64–3.65) |
|
| Second | 3.40 (2.08–5.55) |
|
| Lowest | 3.40 (2.00–5.77) |
|
| Region | ||
| North Central | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| North East | 0.80 (0.59–1.09) | 0.153 |
| North West | 1.26 (0.93–1.71) | 0.138 |
| South East | 0.34 (0.23–0.50) |
|
| South South | 0.68 (0.48–0.96) |
|
| South West | 0.56 (0.39–0.80) |
|
| Adequate number of ITNs in householdb | ||
| No | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Yes | 2.23 (1.82–2.72) | < 0.001 |
| Household owns radio | ||
| No | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Yes | 1.25 (1.02–1.54) | 0.032 |
| Household owns television | ||
| No | 1.00 (reference) | – |
| Yes | 1.08 (0.80–1.45) | 0.634 |
In Nigeria almost all ITNs are long-lasting insecticide-treated net (LLINs). The authors used the term ITN because the analysis was conducted using data on ITNs, which include LLINs and ITNs that have been soaked with insecticide within the past 12 months
ITN insecticide-treated bed net, CI confidence interval
p-values that are significant at the 0.05 level are italic
aDuring the 6 months preceding the survey
bHousehold owns at least one ITN for every two household members