| Literature DB >> 32163426 |
Hannah R Volkman1, Emily J Walz2, Danushka Wanduragala3, Elizabeth Schiffman3, Anne Frosch1,4, Jonathan D Alpern5, Patricia F Walker1,5, Kristina M Angelo6, Christina Coyle7, Mimi A Mohamud3, Esther Mwangi3, Joseline Haizel-Cobbina3, Comfort Nchanji3, Rebecca S Johnson8, Baninla Ladze9, Stephen J Dunlop1,4, William M Stauffer1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite achievements in the reduction of malaria globally, imported malaria cases to the United States by returning international travelers continue to increase. Immigrants to the United States from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) who then travel back to their homelands to visit friends and relatives (VFRs) experience a disproportionate burden of malaria illness. Various studies have explored barriers to malaria prevention among VFRs and non-VFRs-travelers to the same destinations with other purpose for travel-but few employed robust epidemiologic study designs or performed comparative analyses of these two groups. To better quantify the key barriers that VFRs face to implement effective malaria prevention measures, we conducted a comprehensive community-based, cross-sectional, survey to identify differences in malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) among VFRs and others traveling to Africa and describe the differences between VFRs and other types of international travelers. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32163426 PMCID: PMC7067457 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Design of a cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa.
Participants were surveyed in three study arms. The hypothesized relational directionality of barriers and malaria prevention are shown relative to these three groups, where imported malaria cases were hypothesized to be least effective at preventing malaria and are impacted most strongly by behavioral and structural barriers to malaria prevention.
Fig 2A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Participant matrix of target and achieved sample sizes, by survey arm (rows) and traveler population (columns) (n = 489).
A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Demographic characteristics and comparisons of participants stratified by survey arm, travel region, and reason for travel.
| Part I: Characteristics | All VFRs | VFRs, stratified by survey arm | VFRs, stratified by travel region | All Non-VFRs | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall n = 351 | Malaria Cases (M) n = 43 | Community(C) n = 212 | Travel Clinic(T) n = 96 | West African VFRs (W) n = 214 | Other SSA VFRs (S) n = 137 | Travel Clinic (N) n = 138 | ||||||||
| Age, years | 43.3 | (41.9–44.8) | 45.9 | (41.4–50.4) | 43.1 | (41.2–45.0) | 42.8 | (40.0–45.6) | 44.1 | (42.4–45.9) | 42.2 | (39.7–44.7) | 51.9 | (48.9–55.0) |
| Trip duration, weeks | 7.0 | (6.1–8.0) | 7.6 | (4.1–11.6) | 7.8 | (6.3–9.0) | 5.4 | (4.4–6.3) | 5.8 | (4.6–6.9) | 9.0 | (7.4–10.6) | 3.8 | (2.1–5.6) |
| Length of residency in US, years | 15.3 | (14.4–16.2) | 14.3 | (11.1–17.5) | 14.2 | (13.1–15.3) | 18.0 | (16.1–19.9) | 16.1 | (14.9–17.4) | 14.2 | (12.8–15.6) | 30.5 | (19.8–41.2) |
| Male | 48.2 | (42.9–52.6) | 72.1 | (58.1–86.1) | 44.8 | (37.9–51.7) | 44.6 | (34.2–54.9) | 51.2 | (44.3–58.1) | 43.6 | (35.1–52.1) | 42.5 | (33.8–51.2) |
| Education = grade school | 9.5 | (6.3–12.7) | 11.1 | (0.3–21.9) | 11.5 | (7.0–16.0) | 4.4 | (0.1–8.7) | 4.1 | (1.3–6.9) | 17.4 | (10.9–24.0) | 0.8 | (0.0–2.3) |
| Education > high school | 68.5 | (63.4–73.6) | 63.9 | (47.4–80.4) | 65.5 | (58.9–72.1) | 76.9 | (68.1–85.7) | 83.6 | (78.3–88.8) | 46.2 | (37.6–54.8) | 95.3 | (91.6–99.0) |
| Foreign-born | 95.6 | (93.9–98.0) | 97.7 | (93.0–100) | 96.2 | (93.6–98.8) | 94.6 | (89.8–99.3) | 94.8 | (91.8–97.8) | 97.7 | (95.3–100) | 10.3 | (4.9–15.7) |
| Has had malaria before | 67.9 | (62.8–72.9) | 61.9 | (46.6–77.2) | 75.2 | (69.2–81.2) | 53.9 | (43.4–64.5) | 79.5 | (73.9–85.1) | 50.4 | (41.8–59.0) | 3.9 | (0.5–7.4) |
| Has a primary care provider | 88.3 | (83.6–93.1) | 80.8 | (64.5–97.0) | 82.5 | (72.9–92.2) | 94.5 | (89.7–99.3) | 86.1 | (78.3–93.9) | 90.0 | (84.2–96.0) | 88.3 | (82.6–93.9) |
| Destination W. Africa | -- | 81.4 | (69.3–93.5) | -- | -- | -- | -- | 17.8 | (11.1–24.5) | |||||
| 5 or more trips | 24.2 | (19.5–28.9) | 44.0 | (24.1–63.9) | 20.4 | (14.8–26.0) | 27.2 | (17.9–36.4) | 29.4 | (22.8–36.0) | 16.8 | (10.3–23.3) | 24.4 | (16.8–32.0) |
| Number of trips | ||||||||||||||
| Will be first / 1 | 47.5 | -- | 28.0 | -- | 46.8 | -- | 54.3 | -- | 38.5 | -- | 60.3 | -- | 64.6 | -- |
| 2 to 4 | 28.3 | -- | 28.0 | -- | 32.8 | -- | 18.5 | -- | 32.1 | -- | 22.9 | -- | 11.0 | -- |
| 5 or more | 24.2 | -- | 44.0 | -- | 20.4 | -- | 27.2 | -- | 29.4 | -- | 16.8 | -- | 24.4 | -- |
| Age, years | 0.222 | 0.235 | 0.868 | 0.197 | ||||||||||
| Trip duration, weeks | 0.873 | 0.288 | 0.092 | |||||||||||
| Length of residency in US, years | 0.960 | 0.058 | ||||||||||||
| Male | 0.967 | 0.172 | 0.763 | |||||||||||
| Education = grade school | 0.947 | 0.175 | 0.062 | 0.117 | ||||||||||
| Education > high school | 0.852 | 0.138 | 0.052 | |||||||||||
| Foreign-born | 0.642 | 0.428 | 0.513 | 0.184 | ||||||||||
| Has had malaria before | 0.080 | 0.391 | ||||||||||||
| Has a primary care provider | 0.843 | 0.406 | 0.123 | |||||||||||
| Destination W. Africa | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | |||||||||
| 5 or more trips | 0.108 | 0.199 | 0.644 | |||||||||||
| Number of trips | ||||||||||||||
| Will be first / 1 | 0.075 | 0.209 | ||||||||||||
| 2 to 4 | ||||||||||||||
| 5 or more | ||||||||||||||
VFR, traveler who visits friends and relatives; SSA, sub-Saharan Africa; M, Malaria Case VFRs; C, Community VFRs; T, Travel Clinic VFRs; W, West African VFRs; S, Other SSA VFRs; N, Non-VFRs at the Travel Clinic; , mean; %, percent.
Column colors correspond to the groups described and depicted in Fig 2.
a n = 3 pediatric cases excluded from calculation of mean age for comparison across groups. Mean age in years including pediatric cases was 43.3 (38.3–48.6).
b Pairwise comparisons use log-transformed trip duration due to non-normality positive skew of the mean.
c Foreign-born respondents only.
d Paper and online versions of the community survey omitted this prompt therefore community survey arm is ED respondents exclusively.
e Noninformative; sampling protocol-determined outcome.
* Alpha (α) = 0.05; p-value is statistically significant.
A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Malaria knowledge, attitudes and practices among travelers visiting friends and relatives, across study arms and regional traveler populations.
| Part I: Characteristics | All VFRs | VFRs, stratified by survey arm | VFRs, stratified by travel region | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall n = 351 | Malaria Cases (M) n = 43 | Community (C) n = 212 | Travel Clinic (T) n = 96 | West African VFRs (W) n = 214 | Other SSA VFRs (S) n = 137 | |||||||
| Concern about malaria (Likert, 1–5, low-high) | 4 | 3.6 (3.4–3.7) | 1 | 2.5 (1.9–3.1) | 4 | 3.8 (3.6–4.0) | 4 | 3.5 (3.2–3.8) | 4 | 3.7 (3.5–3.9) | 3 | 3.3 (3.0–3.6) |
| Malaria is deadly (Likert, 1–5, disagree-agree) | 5 | 4.5 (4.4–4.6) | 5 | 4.0 (3.6–4.5) | 5 | 4.6 (4.5–4.7) | 5 | 4.5 (4.3–4.6) | 5 | 4.6 (4.4–4.7) | 5 | 4.4 (4.3–4.6) |
| Malaria is preventable | 93.9 | (91.4–96.4) | 92.9 | (84.7–100) | 91.8 | (88.0–95.6) | 98.9 | (96.7–100) | 96.1 | (93.6–98.8) | 90.2 | (85.2–95.4) |
| Listed incorrect method of preventing malaria | 39.9 | (34.3–45.4) | 57.5 | (41.5–73.5) | 36.2 | (29.0–43.4) | 39.1 | (29.0–49.3) | 33.5 | (26.5–40.6) | 48.5 | (39.8–57.2) |
| Listed incorrect method of contracting malaria | 19.5 | (15.2–23.7) | 16.3 | (4.8–27.8) | 16.5 | (11.3–21.7) | 27.1 | (18.0–36.1) | 14.2 | (9.4–19.0) | 27.4 | (19.8–35.0) |
| Had malaria on a previous trip | 11.1 | (6.9–15.2) | -- | 12.5 | (7.3–17.7) | 7.6 | (1.0–14.1) | 14.4 | (8.3–20.5) | 6.4 | (1.3–11.4) | |
| Saw health care provider before last trip | 66.8 | (60.4–73.2) | 41.9 | (26.5–57.2) | 73.2 | (66.4–80.0) | -- | 69.9 | (62.3–77.5) | 60.3 | (48.4–72.2) | |
| On most recent past trip… | ||||||||||||
| Took an antimalarial | 59.4 | (53.6–65.2) | 31.7 | (16.8–46.6) | 61.9 | (54.5–69.3) | (58.9–81.4) | 66.7 | (59.6–73.7) | 47.1 | (37.2–56.9) | |
| Picked where to stay to avoid mosquitos | 57.2 | (50.2–64.2) | 19.2 | (3.0–35.5) | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | -- | 62.0 | (53.5–70.5) | 47.7 | (35.2–60.2) | |
| Educated oneself about malaria | 57.7 | (50.7–64.7) | 23.1 | (5.7–40.4) | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | -- | 60.5 | (51.9–69.0) | 52.3 | (39.8–64.8) | |
| Used mosquito repellent | 62.1 | (55.5–68.7) | 46.5 | (31.0–62.0) | 66.1 | (58.8–73.3) | -- | 67.1 | (59.3–74.9) | 51.5 | (39.3–63.7) | |
| Stayed indoors when mosquitos were out | 55.2 | (48.1–62.2) | 26.9 | (8.7–45.2) | 59.5 | (52.0–67.0) | -- | 55.0 | (46.3–63.7) | 55.4 | (43.0–67.8) | |
| Wore long clothing | 58.2 | (51.2–65.2) | 26.9 | (8.7–45.2) | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | -- | 55.0 | (46.3–63.7) | 64.6 | (52.7–76.6) | |
| Used bed nets | 59.7 | (53.0–66.4) | 44.2 | (28.7–59.7) | 63.7 | (56.3–71.0) | -- | 57.3 | (49.1–65.5) | 64.7 | (53.1–76.4) | |
| Used mosquito coil | 28.4 | (22.0–34.7) | 19.2 | (3.0–35.5) | 29.8 | (22.8–36.7) | -- | 30.2 | (22.2–38.3) | 24.6 | (13.9–35.4) | |
| Concern about malaria (Likert, 1–5, low-high) | 0.174 | |||||||||||
| Malaria is deadly (Likert, 1–5, disagree-agree) | 0.170 | 0.354 | ||||||||||
| Malaria is preventable | 0.816 | 0.091 | ||||||||||
| Listed incorrect method of preventing malaria | 0.053 | 0.639 | ||||||||||
| Listed incorrect method of contracting malaria | 0.972 | 0.171 | ||||||||||
| Had malaria on a previous trip | -- | -- | 0.288 | 0.065 | ||||||||
| Saw health care provider before last trip | -- | -- | 0.166 | |||||||||
| On most recent past trip… | ||||||||||||
| Took an antimalarial | 0.235 | |||||||||||
| Picked where to stay to avoid mosquitos | -- | -- | 0.058 | |||||||||
| Educated oneself about malaria | -- | -- | 0.278 | |||||||||
| Used mosquito repellent | -- | -- | ||||||||||
| Stayed indoors when mosquitos were out | -- | -- | 0.9635 | |||||||||
| Wore long clothing | -- | -- | 0.203 | |||||||||
| Used bed nets | -- | -- | 0.309 | |||||||||
| Used mosquito coil | 0.273 | -- | -- | 0.413 | ||||||||
VFR, traveler who visits friends and relatives; SSA, sub-Saharan Africa; M, Malaria Case VFRs; C, Community VFRs; T, Travel Clinic VFRs; W, West African VFRs; S, Other SSA VFRs; , median; , mean; %, percent.
Column colors correspond to the groups described and depicted in Fig 2.
a Overall, W, S, and their pairwise OR exclude malaria case participants
b Overall, W, S, and their pairwise OR exclude travel clinic participants
c Reflects responses from the pretravel survey regarding most recent past trip prior to scheduling a pretravel visit at the travel clinic.
d Travel clinic VFR respondents were not surveyed regarding malaria prevention techniques on trips prior to scheduling the pretravel visit besides antimalarial use. Post-travel results on malaria prevention for the travel clinic VFR group are reported in Table 3.
e Noninformative; sampling protocol-determined outcome
* Alpha (α) = 0.05; p-value is statistically significant.
A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Inter- and intra-population differences among travelers visiting friends and relatives (VFRs) and other types of travelers to similar destinations (non-VFRs), by survey arm and traveler population.
| Characteristics | Survey arm: Community | Survey arm: Travel Clinic | Comparisons | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intra-VFR | Inter-Pop | |||||||
| Community VFRs (C) n = 212 | Travel Clinic VFRs (T) n = 96 | Non-VFRs (N) n = 129 | C | T | ||||
| Concern about malaria (Likert, 1–5, low-high) | 4 | 3.8 (3.6–4.0) | 4 | 3.5 (3.2–3.8) | 3 | 2.7 (2.5–2.9) | 0.174 | |
| Malaria is deadly (Likert, 1–5, disagree-agree) | 5 | 4.6 (4.5–4.7) | 5 | 4.5 (4.3–4.6) | 5 | 4.5 (4.4–4.7) | 0.196 | |
| Malaria is preventable | 91.8 | (88.0–95.6) | 98.9 | (96.7–100) | 96.9 | (93.9–99.9) | 0.328 | |
| Listed incorrect method of preventing malaria | 36.2 | (29.0–43.4) | 39.1 | (29.0–49.3) | 27.6 | (19.7–35.4) | 0.639 | 0.072 |
| Listed incorrect method of contracting malaria | 16.5 | (11.3–21.7) | 27.1 | (18.0–36.1) | 16.3 | (9.8–22.7) | 0.051 | |
| Had malaria on a previous trip | 12.5 | (7.3–17.7) | 7.6 | (1.0–14.1) | 3.6 | (0.0–8.6) | 0.288 | 0.354 |
| Will take antimalarial | 94.6 | (87.0–100) | 97.8 | (94.8–100) | 99.2 | (97.6–100) | 0.349 | 0.416 |
| Did take antimalarial | 61.9 | (54.5–69.3) | 83.0 | (71.8–94.1) | 98.7 | (96.2–100) | ||
| Will pick where to stay to avoid mosquitos | 88.9 | (78.1–99.7) | 93.8 | (88.8–98.7) | 83.7 | (77.3–90.2) | 0.353 | |
| Did pick where to stay to avoid mosquitos | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | 80.9 | (69.2–92.5) | 71.8 | (61.6–82.0) | 0.259 | |
| Will educate oneself about malaria | 91.7 | (82.2–100) | 91.7 | (86.0–97.3) | 95.3 | (91.7–99.0) | 1.000 | 0.264 |
| Did educate oneself about malaria | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | 91.5 | (83.2–99.8) | 92.3 | (86.3–98.4) | 0.870 | |
| Will use mosquito repellent | 83.3 | (70.5–96.1) | 91.7 | (86.0–97.3) | 95.3 | (91.7–99.0) | 0.174 | 0.264 |
| Did use mosquito repellent | 66.1 | (58.8–73.3) | 78.7 | (66.6–90.9) | 80.8 | (71.8–89.7) | 0.102 | 0.782 |
| Will stay indoors when mosquitos are out | 73.3 | (70.5–96.1) | 87.5 | (80.8–94.2) | 68.2 | (60.1–76.4) | 0.536 | |
| Did stay indoors when mosquitos were out | 59.5 | (52.0–67.0) | 80.9 | (69.2–92.5) | 66.2 | (55.4–77.0) | 0.083 | |
| Will wear long clothing | 77.8 | (63.5–92.0) | 88.5 | (82.1–95.0) | 94.6 | (90.6–98.5) | 0.123 | 0.106 |
| Did wear long clothing | 63.1 | (55.7–70.5) | 74.5 | (61.5–87.4) | 92.3 | (86.3–98.4) | 0.150 | |
| Will use bed nets | 91.7 | (82.2–100) | 79.2 | (70.9–87.4) | 69.8 | (61.7–77.8) | 0.104 | 0.115 |
| Did use bed nets | 63.7 | (56.3–71.0) | 44.7 | (29.9–59.4) | 71.8 | (61.6–82.0) | ||
| Will use mosquito coil | 63.9 | (47.4–80.4) | 45.8 | (35.7–56.0) | 17.1 | (10.5–23.6) | 0.067 | |
| Did use mosquito coil | 29.8 | (22.8–36.7) | 24.4 | (11.4–37.5) | 7.7 | (1.6–13.7) | 0.484 | |
VFR, traveler who visits friends and relatives; C, Community VFRs; T, Travel Clinic VFRs; N, Non-VFRs at the Travel Clinic; , median; , mean; %, percent.
Column colors correspond to the groups described and depicted in Fig 2.
a Community VFR group includes only respondents who have not yet traveled, reporting planned malaria prevention for first trip (n = 37). Travel clinic VFR (n = 96) and Non-VFR (n = 129) groups include all pretravel respondents.
b Community VFR group includes only respondents who had traveled, reporting malaria prevention used on last trip (n = 168). Travel clinic VFR (n = 49) and Non-VFR (n = 80) groups include only travelers who completed the post-travel survey
* Alpha (α) = 0.05; p-value is statistically significant.
Fig 3A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Planned and actual malaria prevention outcome matrix among travelers visiting friends and relatives (VFRs) and non-VFRs surveyed at the travel clinic both before and after travel.
Fig 4A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Adherence to malaria prevention reported after travel among travelers visiting friends and relatives (VFRs) and non-VFRs who reported planning to use the prevention approach before travel.
Fig 5A cross-sectional, multi-setting survey of malaria prevention knowledge, attitudes, and practices among US travelers to sub-Saharan Africa: Conceptual health behavior framework with hypothesized reduction in risk perception and use of malaria prevention upon repeated trips of travelers visiting friends and relatives.