| Literature DB >> 34377469 |
Bedru Jemal1, Zemedu Aweke1, Simeneh Mola1, Sileshi Hailu1, Sileshi Abiy2, Getahun Dendir3, Abere Tilahun4, Biruk Tesfaye5, Agmuas Asichale6, Derartu Neme1, Teshome Regasa1, Hailemariam Mulugeta1, Kassaw Moges7, Mohamedrabi Bedru8, Siraj Ahmed1, Diriba Teshome9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An emerging respiratory disease abbreviated as coronavirus disease 2019 was first reported in December 2019 in Wuhan city of China. The virus is zoonotic and tends to be transmitted between animals to humans and humans to humans. The major route of transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 is droplet and close contact. The Ethiopian Ministry of Health has initiated training for health care workers at a different level. Thus, the main objective of this study is to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of health workers in Ethiopia toward coronavirus disease 2019 and its prevention techniques.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Ethiopia; attitude; healthcare worker; knowledge; practice
Year: 2021 PMID: 34377469 PMCID: PMC8327227 DOI: 10.1177/20503121211034389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Sociodemographic characteristics of health workers.
| Variable | Number | Percent | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | >25 | 97 | 24.4 |
| 26–30 | 203 | 51.1 | |
| >30 | 97 | 24.4 | |
| Gender | Female | 172 | 43.3 |
| Male | 225 | 56.7 | |
| Level of education | Diploma | 72 | 18.1 |
| BSc degree | 249 | 62.7 | |
| Masters and above | 76 | 19.1 | |
| Marital status | Married | 186 | 46.9 |
| Unmarried | 211 | 53.1 | |
| Religion | Orthodox | 273 | 68.8 |
| Catholic | 6 | 1.5 | |
| Protestant | 84 | 21.2 | |
| Muslim | 30 | 7.6 | |
| Others | 4 | 1.0 | |
| Profession | Physician | 63 | 15.9 |
| Anesthetist | 102 | 25.7 | |
| Nurse | 141 | 35.5 | |
| Pharmacy | 26 | 6.5 | |
| Others | 65 | 16.4 | |
| Work experience | >5 years | 104 | 26.2 |
| 2–5 years | 141 | 35.5 | |
| <2 years | 152 | 38.3 | |
| Training on COVID-19 | Yes | 26 | 6.5 |
| No | 371 | 93.5 | |
| Travel history | Yes | 76 | 19.1 |
| No | 321 | 80.9 | |
| Chronic medical illness | Yes | 30 | 7.6 |
| No | 367 | 92.4 |
= medical laboratory, midwifery, and public health.
= Wakefeta.
Figure 1.Practice of health workers toward COVID-19 and prevention.
Figure 2.Correlation scatter among knowledge, attitude, and practice in Ethiopian healthcare workers: (a): knowledge vs attitude and (b): knowledge vs practice.
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis showing predictors of knowledge about COVID-19 (good vs poor) (N = 397).
| Variable | COVID-19 knowledge | COR | AOR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Good | Poor | ||||
| Age | >25 | 89 (91.8%) | 8 (8.2%) | 2.198 (.893–5.408) | 1.837 (.458–7.361) |
| 26–30 | 180 (88.7%) | 23 (11.3%) | 1.546 (.776–3.082) | 1.278 (.495–3.295) | |
| >30 | 81 (83.5%) | 16 (16.5%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Gender | Female | 152 (88.4%) | 20 (11.6%) | 1.036 (.560–1.918) | |
| Male | 198 (88.0%) | 27 (12.0%) | Ref | ||
| Level of education | Diploma | 62 (86.1%) | 10 (13.9%) | Ref | Ref |
| BSc degree | 216 (86.7%) | 33 (13.3%) | 1.056 (.493–2.261) | .525 (.206–1.337) | |
| Masters and above | 72 (94.7%) | 4 (5.3%) | 2.903 (.867–9.719) | .931 (.213–4.073) | |
| Marital status | Married | 162 (87.1%) | 24 (12.9%) | .826 (.449–1.519 | |
| Unmarried | 188 (89.1%) | 23 (10.9%) | Ref | ||
| Religion | Orthodox | 245 (89.7%) | 28 (10.3%) | 2.917 (.293–28.995) | |
| Catholic | 5 (83.3%) | 1 (16.7%) | 1.667 (.074–37.728) | ||
| Protestant | 69 (82.1%) | 15 (17.9%) | 1.533 (.149–15.776) | ||
| Muslim | 28 (93.3%) | 2 (6.7%) | 4.667 (.320–68.032) | ||
| Others | 3 (75.0%) | 1 (25.0%) | Ref | ||
| Work experience | >5 years | 128 (84.2%) | 24 (15.8%) | .762 (.368–1.575) | 1.622 (.497–5.288) |
| 2–5 years | 131 (92.9%) | 10 (7.1%) | 1.871 (.787–4.452) | 2.738 (.960–7.810) | |
| <2 years | 91 (87.5%) | 13 (12.5%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Training on COVID-19 | Yes | 20 (76.9%) | 6 (23.1%) | .414 (.157–1.091) | .572 (.166–1.970) |
| No | 330 (88.9%) | 41 (11.1%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Travel history | Yes | 67 (88.2%) | 9 (11.8%) | 1.000 (.461–2.167) | |
| No | 283 (11.8%) | 38 (88.2%) | Ref | ||
| Chronic medical illness | Yes | 20 (66.7%) | 10 (33.3%) | .224 (.098–.515) |
|
| No | 330 (10.1%) | 37 (89.9%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Social media as a source of information | Yes | 272 (93.2%) | 20 (6.8%) | 4.708 (2.506–8.845) |
|
| No | 78 (74.3%) | 27 (25.7%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Government as a source of information | Yes | 173 (93.0%) | 13 (7.0%) | 2.556 (1.305–5.009) | 1.375 (.572–3.307) |
| No | 177 (83.9%) | 34 (16.1%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Television/Radio | Yes | 262 (92.3%) | 22 (7.7%) | 3.383 (1.817–6.300) |
|
| No | 88 (77.9%) | 25 (22.1%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Telecommunication | Yes | 181 (96.8%) | 6 (3.2%) | 7.319 (3.030–17.679) |
|
| No | 169 (80.5%) | 41 (19.5% | Ref | Ref | |
| Peer | Yes | 106 (96.4%) | 4 (3.6%) | 4.670 (1.635–13.340) | .967 (.235–3.984) |
| No | 244 (85.0%) | 43 (15.0%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Religious place | Yes | 84 (90.3%) | 9 (9.7%) | 1.333 (.619–2.871) | |
| No | 266 (87.5%) | 38 (12.5%) | Ref | ||
AOR: adjusted odds ratio; COR: crude odds ratio.
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis showing predictors of attitude about COVID-19 (good vs poor) (N = 397).
| Variable | COVID-19 Attitude | COR (95% CI) | AOR (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| good | Poor | ||||
| Age | >25 | 91 (93.8%) | 6 (6.2%) | .652 (.178–2.388) | |
| 26–30 | 192 (94.6%) | 11 (5.4%) | .751 (.233–2.421) | ||
| >30 | 93 (95.9%) | 4 (4.1%) | Ref | ||
| Gender | Female | 163 (94.8%) | 9 (5.2%) | 1.020 (.420–2.480) | |
| Male | 213 (94.7%) | 12 (5.3%) | Ref | ||
| Level of education | Diploma | 66 (91.7%) | 6 (8.3%) | Ref | |
| Bsc degree | 235 (94.4%) | 14 (5.6%) | 1.526 (.564–4.126) | .208 (.023–1.860) | |
| Masters and above | 75 (98.7%) | 1 (1.3%) | 6.818 (.800–58.107) | .322 (.040–2.605) | |
| Marital status | Married | 180 (96.8%) | 6 (3.2%) | 2.296 (.872–6.045) | 1.643 (.544–4.964) |
| Unmarried | 196 (92.9%) | 15 (7.1%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Religion | Orthodox | 257 (94.1%) | 16 (5.9%) | ||
| Catholic | 6 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |||
| Protestant | 80 (95.2%) | 4 (4.8%) | |||
| Muslim | 29 (96.7%) | 1 (3.3%) | |||
| Others | 4 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |||
| Work experience | >5 years | 146 (96.1%) | 6 (3.9%) | 2.589 (.911–7.359) | 2.246 (.662–7.617) |
| 2–5 years | 136 (96.5%) | 5 (3.5%) | 2.894 (.958–8.739) | 2.463 (.772–7.862) | |
| <2 years | 94 (90.4%) | 10 (9.6%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Training on COVID-19 | Yes | 26 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | ||
| No | 350 (94.3%) | 21 (5.7%) | |||
| Travel history | Yes | 74 (97.4%) | 2 (2.6%) | 2.328 (.530–10.216) | |
| No | 302 (94.1%) | 19 (5.9%) | Ref | ||
| Chronic medical illness | Yes | 25 (83.3%) | 5 (16.7%) | .228 (.077–.673) |
|
| No | 351 (95.6%) | 16 (4.4%) | Ref | Ref | |
| Social media as a source of information | Yes | 278 (95.2%) | 14 (4.8%) | 1.418 (.556–3.617) | |
| No | 98 (93.3%) | 7 (6.7%) | Ref | ||
| Government as source of information | Yes | 175 (94.1%) | 11 (5.9%) | .791 (.328–1.908) | |
| No | 201 (95.3%) | 10 (4.7%) | Ref | ||
| Television/radio | Yes | 268 (94.4%) | 16 (5.6%) | .775 (.277–2.169) | |
| No | 108 (95.6%) | 5 (4.4%) | Ref | ||
| Telecommunication | Yes | 178 (95.2%) | 9 (4.8%) | 1.199 (.493–2.912) | |
| No | 198 (94.3%) | 12 (5.7%) | Ref | ||
| Peer | Yes | 102 (92.7%) | 8 (7.3%) | .605 (.244–1.502) | |
| No | 274 (95.5%) | 13 (4.5%) | Ref | ||
| Religious place | Yes | 85 (91.4%) | 8 (8.6%) | .475 (.190–1.183) | .494 (.189–1.289) |
| No | 291 (95.7%) | 13 (4.3%) | Ref | Ref | |
AOR: adjusted odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; COR: crude odds ratio.
Figure 3.Distribution source of information and knowledge of healthcare workers concerning COVID-19.