| Literature DB >> 34115758 |
Nicholas Ngwili1,2, Nancy Johnson3, Raphael Wahome2, Samuel Githigia2, Kristina Roesel1,4, Lian Thomas1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Taenia solium (T. solium), is a zoonotic helminth causing three diseases namely; taeniasis (in humans), neurocysticercosis (NCC, in humans) and porcine cysticercosis (PCC, in pigs) and is one of the major foodborne diseases by burden. The success or failure of control options against this parasite in terms of reduced prevalence or incidence of the diseases may be attributed to the contextual factors which underpin the design, implementation, and evaluation of control programmes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34115758 PMCID: PMC8221787 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1PRISMA flow chart of the selection process in the systematic literature review of contextual factors for T. solium control.
A synthesis of the contextual factors for Taenia solium control interventions adapted from Craig et al. [9].
| Contextual factor | Description | Examples and applications to the case of |
|---|---|---|
| Epidemiological factors | Baseline incidence, prevalence, and distribution of the health problem of interest and its determinants in the target population | Baseline prevalence and incidence of PCC, taeniosis and NCC as driven by the underlying biological and socio-economic risk factors, the measure of the outcomes and its reliability, diagnostics methods used. |
| Socioeconomic factors | Distribution of social and economic resources among communities or populations affected by the intervention, water health and sanitation coverage and education levels | The motivation for rearing pigs, whether farming is subsistence or for income generation; current husbandry practices, including who makes decisions about how pigs should be reared and who provides the labour for pig rearing; level of knowledge and willingness/ability to change practices, including adopting the intervention technologies, income distribution among farmers, access to land or other resources, language, ethnicity, etc. that could affect interventions, other economic activities within the target area |
| Cultural factors | Beliefs, attitudes and practices among farmers, policymakers, practitioners and those targeted by the intervention, cultural factors relating to pork consumption. | Beliefs, attitudes and practices surrounding pig rearing (pigs are supposed to be “natural cleaners/sanitation policemen” by eating human faeces), pork consumption (e.g. eating raw pork), and |
| Geographical and environmental factors | Features of the immediate or more distal (e.g. regional or national) physical environment, either natural or built. | Physical environment including natural and built environment, seasonal variation, access roads, target community location in relation to physical features like mountains, presence of rivers and ponds/lakes–potential for human effluent to contaminate and source of surface drinking water, use of river water for irrigation |
| Service and organizational | Characteristics, such as readiness to change and motivation, of the individuals delivering the intervention, the organizations in which they work and the wider service environment in which those organizations operate. | Ministry of health and Ministry of livestock, local provincial administration, One Health units, local and international non-governmental organizations (NGOs), willingness of ministries of health and livestock to support interventions, capacity and motivation of local government staff involved in project activities, willingness of local institutions including universities and NGOs to collaborate in the control of |
| Ethical considerations | The extent to which implementers and recipients understand and agree about the benefits and harms of the intervention and can provide informed consent of exposure to the intervention and participation in associated research | Target population’s common understanding about the benefits and harms from the intervention, capacity to make informed decision and give consent to participate, community empowerment to give consent on their own behalf and on behalf of their dependents especially for therapeutic interventions. |
| Policy, strategies and legal guidelines | The wider policy framework within which a specific intervention is embedded | |
| Political | Distribution of power among stakeholders and others with an interest in promoting or obstructing the optimum design or implementation of the intervention | Power dynamics among stakeholders, structure of government. Political structures including influence and power of local administrators, interest of the local political leadership in the intervention |
| Historical | Continuing influence of past conditions, socio-political relationships, policies and legal frameworks | Influence of past involvement of target community in disease control interventions, positive or negative experiences with certain organizations |
| Financial | Sources and mechanisms of funding for the intervention and the wider payment, reward, incentive or charging structures in which they are embedded | Sources and mechanisms for funding for the intervention, costs versus the benefits, expected budget allocation by ministry of health and ministry of livestock, stability of funding during project implementation period. |
Fig 2Distribution of studies included in the SLR on contextual factors for T. solium control (Map: Fredrick Otieno, ILRI).
Base map Link: .
Summary of contextual factors analysis for efficacy studies.
| Epidemiological factors | ○ Challenges in evaluation including loss to follow-up | [ |
| Social and economic factors | ○ Commercially oriented farmers were more supportive of the control interventions in areas where pigs are an important source of income. | [ |
| Cultural factors | ○ Importance of traditional medicine among the community supported uptake of the intervention | [ |
| Service and organization factors | ○ Extensive sensitization of the local community and involvement of various stakeholders could translate to smooth delivery of the intervention | [ |
Summary of contextual factors analysis for effectiveness studies.
| Epidemiological factors | ○ Baseline prevalence of the disease could modify the goal of the project and measures of effect | [ |
| Socio-economic factors | ○ Baseline knowledge can affect delivery and evaluation | [ |
| Cultural factors | ○ Baseline anthropological data on beliefs, attitudes and practises which may help maintain | [ |
| Geographical and environmental factors | ○ Natural and built environment can influence the implementation; for example, poor accessibility of study sites due to lack of roads, challenges in evaluation due to lack of sample handling and storage facilities | [ |
| Service and organizational factors | ○ Local capacities of staff and institutions can affect the delivery of intervention | [ |
| Policy and strategies on | ○ The approval and acceptability of drug administration interventions can be influenced by country laws on licensing of the drugs to be tested | [ |
| Historical factors | ○ Past involvement of target community and their experiences about other projects can shape their participation in future projects—previously beneficial projects may encourage participation in other projects | [ |
Summary of contextual factors analysis for scale-up studies.
| Epidemiological factors | ○ Problems with compliance have been observed for collection of faecal and blood samples. | [ |
| Social and economic factors | ○ Differential participation of men in baseline and end line surveys due to commitments in farms may have affected gendered analysis of the effects of the intervention. | [ |
| Cultural factors | ○ Taboos around toilet use among the Chewa people in Zambia ensured open defecation continued even with promotion of toilet use. | [ |
| Geographical and environmental factors | ○ Rainfall seasonality affected men attendance to post intervention evaluation meetings because they were busy in the farms. | [ |
| Service and organization factors | ○ One health aspects of involving all relevant stakeholders were not fulfilled leading to several challenges in the study in Zambia. | [ |
| Policy and strategies on | ○ Projects can be embedded within existing National disease control programme | |
| Financial | ○ Stability and sustainability of funding may affect evaluations due to reduced sampling rounds or sample size | [ |