| Literature DB >> 34367639 |
Ayele Mamo1, Mesud M Hassen1, Ahmednur Adem2, Zinash Teferu2, Musa Kumbi2, Abduljewad Husen2, Damtew Solomon3, Abate Lette2, Sintayew Hailu2, Edao Sinba2, Abdushakur M Abduletif2, Jeylan Kassim2, Gashaw Walle4, Daniel Atlaw3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coronavirus disease is a highly transmittable and pathogenic viral infection caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, which poses therapeutic dilemmas. Some suggestions for drug treatment seem problematic. Beliefs about the causes of health problems are determinants of treatment seeking decisions. Hence, one of the alternatives for the solution of health problems is employing traditional medicine to prevent coronavirus disease 19.Entities:
Keywords: Bale zone; COVID-19; drugs; modern medicine; traditional medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34367639 PMCID: PMC8312174 DOI: 10.1177/20503121211034384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Socio-demographic characteristics of study participants in Bale zones communities, Southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
| Variables | Frequency ( | Proportion (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Gender Male | 547 | 64.1 |
| Female | 307 | 35.9 |
| Age in years Mean | 34.12 | |
| Standard deviation | 13.29 | |
| Minimum | 18 | |
| Maximum | 90 | |
| Ethnicity Oromo | 845 | 98.9 |
| Amhara | 4 | 0.5 |
| Tigre | 3 | 0.4 |
| Others | 2 | 0.2 |
| Residence Rural | 611 | 71.5 |
| Urban | 243 | 28.5 |
| Occupation Government workers | 113 | 13.2 |
| NGO employee | 7 | 0.8 |
| Private workers | 161 | 18.9 |
| Farmers | 499 | 58.4 |
| Others | 74 | 8.7 |
| Role in family Father/mother | 660 | 77.3 |
| Son | 143 | 16.7 |
| Daughter | 51 | 6 |
| Level of education No formal education | 213 | 24.9 |
| Primary education (1–8) | 335 | 39.2 |
| Secondary education (9–12) | 178 | 20.8 |
| College and above (12 +) | 128 | 15 |
| Marital status Married | 645 | 75.5 |
| Single | 183 | 21.4 |
| Divorced | 24 | 2.8 |
| Others | 2 | 0.2 |
| Monthly income ETB Median | 1675.27 | |
| Minimum | 10 | |
| Maximum | 50,000 | |
| Source of information religious leaders | 157 | 18.4 |
| TV/radio | 534 | 62.5 |
| Social media | 285 | 33.4 |
| Health workers | 55 | 6.4 |
| Gov’t announcements | 74 | 8.7 |
| Other source (like telecom) | 1 | 0.1 |
| Distance from health facility | ||
| Near health facility | 591 | 69.2 |
| Long distance > 1 h | 256 | 30 |
| Don’t know | 7 | 0.8 |
| Substance use No | 589 | 69 |
| Yes | 265 | 31 |
| Types of substance used Khat | 228 | 26.7 |
| Cigarettes smoking | 33 | 3.9 |
| Alcohol drinking | 28 | 3.3 |
| Other substance | 1 | 0.1 |
| History of chronic illness No | 754 | 88.3 |
| Yes | 100 | 11.7 |
| House ownership No | 250 | 29.3 |
| Yes | 604 | 70.7 |
Figure 1.Response to questions related to knowledge level toward COVID-19 pandemic in Bale zones, southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
Response to questions related to attitude level toward COVID-19 pandemic in Bale zones, Southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
| List of variables | Strongly disagree | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | Strongly agree |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotics can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 183 (21.4) | 471 (55.2) | 80 (9.4) | 99 (11.6) | 21 (2.5) |
| ART can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 245 (28.7) | 491 (57.5) | 58 (6.8) | 48 (5.6) | 12 (1.4) |
| Antipain can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 191 (22.4) | 507 (59.4) | 55 (6.4) | 83 (9.7) | 18 (2.1) |
| Traditional medicine can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 188 (22.0) | 448 (52.5) | 58 (6.8) | 149 (17.4) | 11 (1.3) |
| Alcohol can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 336 (39.3) | 450 (52.7) | 33 (3.9) | 28 (3.3) | 7 (0.8) |
| Antimalarial can be used for prevention or treatments of COVID-19 | 256 (30.0) | 479 (56.1) | 63 (7.4) | 49 (5.7) | 7 (0.8) |
Figure 2.Response to questions related to drug use practice toward COVID-19 pandemic in Bale zones, Southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
Multiple logistic regression analysis of the association between independent variables and knowledge toward COVID-19 pandemic in Bale zones, Southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
| Variables | COR (95% CI) | P value | AOR (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categorized age | ||||
| <25 | .002 | .634 | ||
| 25–34 | .629 (.413–.958) | .031 | .762 (.479–1.212) | .251 |
| 35–45 | .533 (.328–.866) | .011 | .903 (.519–1.572) | .718 |
| >45 | .376 (.228–.622) | .001 | .805 (.449–1.443) | .466 |
| Monthly income | ||||
| <500 | .019 | .070 | ||
| 500–1500 | .701 (.476–1.033) | .072 | .678 (.444–1.034) | .071 |
| 1500–250 | 1.136 (.742–1.738) | .558 | 1.029 (.645–1.641) | .905 |
| >2500 | 1.206 (.836–1.740) | .316 | 1.120 (.735–1.706) | .599 |
| Level of education | ||||
| No formal education | 1 | |||
| Primary school (1–8) | .208 (.130–.333) | .001 | 2.734 (1.847–4.049) | .001 |
| Secondary school (9–12) | .572 (.375–.872) | .009 | 5.050 (3.116–8.186) | .001 |
| Collage and above (12+) | 1.066 (.661–1.719) | .792 | 4.761 (2.773–8.172) | .001 |
| History of chronic illnesses | ||||
| No | ||||
| Yes | .741 (.487–1.128) | .162 | .942 (.593–1.495) | .800 |
| Place of Residence | ||||
| Rural | ||||
| Urban | .006 (1.520–1.126) | 2.052 | 1.294 (.928–1.806) | .129 |
| Attitude toward COVID-19 | ||||
| Negative attitude | ||||
| positive attitude | .000 (2.789–2.079) | 3.741 | 2.879 (2.108–3.931) | .001 |
| Constant | .229 | .001 | ||
AOR: adjusted odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; COR: crude odds ratio.
statistically significant in bivariate; **statistically significant in multivariate.
Multiple logistic regression analysis of the association between independent variables and attitudes toward COVID-19 pandemic in Bale zones, southeast Ethiopia (n = 854).
| Variables | COR (95% CI) | P value | AOR (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Information from religious leader No | ||||
| Yes | 2.166 (1.438–3.262) | .001 | 4.239 (1.963–9.154) | .001 |
| Information from radio/TV No | ||||
| Yes | 1.258 (.942–1.680) | .120 | 3.139 (1.728–5.702) | .001 |
| Alcohol drinking No | ||||
| Yes | .566 (.258–1.242) | .156 | .420 (.161–1.094) | .079 |
| Knowledge toward COVID-19 | ||||
| Poor knowledge | ||||
| Good knowledge | 2.789 (2.079–3.741) | .001 | 3.798 (2.088–6.908) | .001 |
| Drug use practice | ||||
| Poor practice | ||||
| Good practice | 2.856 (2.043–3.993) | .001 | 4.230 (2.086–8.580) | .001 |
| Constant | .121 | .001 |
AOR: adjusted odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; COR: crude odds ratio.
statistically significant in bivariate; **statistically significant in multivariate.
Traditional medicines used by the community in two Bale zones.
| Local name | Scientific name | Part used | Dosage form |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zingibilaa |
| Rhizome | Solid |
| Xoosinyii |
| Leaf | Liquid |
| Teena Addam |
| Leaf | Liquid |
| Sinaificaa |
| Seed | Solid |
| Qulubbi Addi |
| Bulb | Solid |
| Loomi |
| Fruit | Liquid |
| Feexoo |
| Seed | Solid |
| Baargamoo |
| Leaf | Gaseous |
| Abusuudaa gurraacha |
| Seed | Solid |
| Burtukaana |
| Fruit | Liquid |
| Abaaboo suufii |
| Seed | Liquid |
| Bursaa/bursa | |||
| Habukurtoo |
| Fruit | Liquid |
| Qaaraa |
| Seed | Solid |
| Damma |
|