Burden of Malaria and Health Service Utilization in a Tribal Community of West Bengal State, India
Ayan Ghosh1,, Deblina Sarkar1, Ranabir Pal2, Bijoy Mukherjee3
1Department of Community Medicine, College of Medicine and JNM Hospital, Kalyani, West Bengal, India
2Department of Community Medicine and Family Medicine, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
3Department of Community Medicine, Katihar Medical College and Hospital, Katihar, Bihar, India
Abstract
There is an urgent need for updating key socio-economic-cultural indictors and scientific understanding on Malaria for suitable control strategies among tribal populations. The study was conducted to find risk correlates of Malaria among tribal groups. A community based analytical cross-sectional study was done among tribals of a district of West Bengal in eastern India by interview technique using standardized tool. The study participants were predominantly males (81.50% %), between 45-60 years (65.87%),one in ten had no formal education; more than half of them were associated with agriculture. One fourth of the participants reported their source of knowledge on Malaria from Newspaper/ Radio/ TV while one fourths became knowledgeable while suffering from Malaria. Majority recognized mosquito bite as basic issue (71.63%), bite at night (96.64%), breed in stagnant water (79.57%). Yet, only one fourth correctly responded that mosquitoes, after biting a Malaria patient, can transmit the disease;. Half of them identified common malarial symptom of fever with shivering and indoor dark resting place of mosquitoes during daytime. Malaria is caused by Plasmodium parasite was correctly known to very few (1.44%). Regarding health seeking behaviour, 40.63% preferred hospital treatment; still disease condition was deciding factor to seek formal care by 95.67%; incidentally their expectation of treatment was limited to chloroquine (84.62). Bed nets was practiced as the commonest protective method followed by draining of stagnant water. Among users using bed nets only 85(70.83%) reported using Insecticide treated nets. The present study findings could provide baseline information to design effective and sustainable Malaria control strategies suited to local conditions in the near future as unsatisfactory knowledge about Malaria among the tribals is significant risk.
Keywords: attitudes, knowledge, malaria, practices, tribals
Copyright © 2015 Science and Education Publishing. All Rights Reserved.Cite this article:
- Ayan Ghosh, Deblina Sarkar, Ranabir Pal, Bijoy Mukherjee. Burden of Malaria and Health Service Utilization in a Tribal Community of West Bengal State, India. American Journal of Public Health Research. Vol. 3, No. 5A, 2015, pp 182-185. https://pubs.sciepub.com/ajphr/3/5A/38
- Ghosh, Ayan, et al. "Burden of Malaria and Health Service Utilization in a Tribal Community of West Bengal State, India." American Journal of Public Health Research 3.5A (2015): 182-185.
- Ghosh, A. , Sarkar, D. , Pal, R. , & Mukherjee, B. (2015). Burden of Malaria and Health Service Utilization in a Tribal Community of West Bengal State, India. American Journal of Public Health Research, 3(5A), 182-185.
- Ghosh, Ayan, Deblina Sarkar, Ranabir Pal, and Bijoy Mukherjee. "Burden of Malaria and Health Service Utilization in a Tribal Community of West Bengal State, India." American Journal of Public Health Research 3, no. 5A (2015): 182-185.
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1. Introduction
More than 100 countries worldwide are known as malaria endemic zone . 216 million cases of Malaria were reported in 2010 globally. Malaria is major public health problem in tribal areas with a big contributor to morbidity and mortality [1]. In India the estimated malaria cases were 1.31 million with 753 deaths in the year 2011; more than half were infected with Plasmodium falciparum [2]. However, actual number may be more due to underreporting from private health care providers [2]. There is a significant difference in the nature of Malaria burden in tribal areas. Tribal areas are mostly endemic areas and secondly, the proportion of severe Malaria in this burden is extremely high. It has huge implication for the tribal economy and wellbeing of these communities and put further pressure on the already economically weak tribal families. There are four basic factors responsible for higher burden of Malaria in tribal areas-environmental factor, malnutrition, poor access to health services and development projects. Malaria protective measures are related to knowledge and beliefs of people; when they think Malaria risk is low, it is more difficult to implement protective measures [3]. The vulnerable segment of the population are worst affected due to above reasons [4]. Studies on knowledge, attitudes and practices are becoming more important to design and improve Malaria control activities, to establish epidemiological and behavioural baselines and to identify indicators for monitoring programs [5]. Perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes about malaria causation, symptom identification, treatment of malaria, and prevention are often overlooked in malaria control efforts. The purpose of this study was to to understand these issues related to the knowledge and health seeking behaviour for Malaria among tribals which can be an important step towards developing strategies with implications for control.
2. Methodology
2.1. Study DesignA community based analytic cross sectional study was conducted from between January and March 2014 on the census tribal population residing permanently in the field practice area of Department of Community Medicine, College of Medicine and JNM Hospital, Kalyani, West Bengal.
2.2. Study InstrumentThe pretested questionnaire interview schedule was developed incorporating to find out relation to malaria with the socio demographic situation prevailing in India that was tailor-made by repeated pilot study including socio-demographic correlates like adult residents' knowledge and perceptions about Malaria transmission, cause, and treatment seeking patterns, preventive measures and practices. To minimize bias information and variables the questionnaire prepared in English language was translated into native local language ‘Amharic’ to make it understandable and to administer by interviewers and interviewees.
2.3. Data Collection ProcedureStudy was approved by Institutional ethics committee. All the participants were individually counseled by the health workers and asked to provide informed consent. They were assured that the information collected will be earmarked only for research purpose. The principal investigator trained the data collection team and supervised the data collection. The structured questionnaire was administered by trained field workers by conducting house-to-house visits in 416 tribal households. The heads of household was interviewed or in their absence one adult person per household was interviewed; on an average an hour per participant was required for acquisition of concluding data and five to six persons could be covered up per day. The data were strictly kept confidential and were not disclosed for the assessment, management or intervention. The concept of disease dynamics of Malaria was discussed in several sessions in connection with feedback to the study.
2.4. Statistical AnalysisThe data were collected and entered into MS Excel spreadsheets for analysis. Epidemiological variables were analyzed using Graph Pad In Stat “version 3” software with an alpha error of five percent.
3. Results
Among 416 respondents a great majority were males (81.50 %), between 45-60 years (65.87%) 10.57 percent of had no formal education; 55.53 percent were associated with agriculture [Table 1].
Of the respondents 152 (36.54%) heard about Malaria from print and electronic media; 106(25.48%) knew Malaria after they suffered from it. Majority of them, 71.63 percent reported mosquito bite as cause of Malaria, yet only 26.92 percent could correctly respond that mosquitoes, after biting a Malaria infected patient, can only transmit disease. Shivering as a common symptom of Malaria was known to half (50.96%) of them [Table 2].
Almost everyone (96.64%) knew that mosquito prefer night time biting time while stagnant water as breeding place by 79.57 percent, and resting place in the indoor dark area during day time by 53.37 percent [Table 2].
If family members had fever, visiting hospital was preferred was preferred 40.63 percent followed by taking help of traditional healers (36.78%) and drug shop (21.87%).
The most important factor was condition of family member when deciding to seek formal care with fever by 398 (95.67%) followed by perceived cost by 18 (4.33%). To their horizon of knowledge by most (84.62), the antimalarial therapy was limited to chloroquine. Bed nets was commonest protective method practiced by 120(28.85%); among them 85(70.83%) were using insecticide treated and 35(29.17%) untreated nets. Second most predominant preventive measure in practice was draining of stagnant water 125(30.04). In practice, 17(4.09) participants in our study reported home treatment with anti Malarial [Table 3 and Table 4].
4. Discussions
This study sheds light on Malaria in tribals of Kalyani regarding the level of understanding community knowledge, attitude and practice about Malaria and health seeking behavior. It provides information for educators and policy makers that are necessary for guidance towards tribal Malaria preventive campaigns.
Our study revealed that Malaria was known disease that was supported in literature [6, 7, 8].
Among the respondents in our study only 112(26.92%) respondents correctly about malaria transmission.
The respondents' level of awareness about mode of Malaria higher than some studies reported from Africa [9, 10], though lower that studies reported from Malawi (55%) [11], Turkey (67%) [12], and other Ethiopian studies (93%) [13, 14].
Even though staying in malaria endemic area, general mass of people in India and other tropical countries were unaware of the disease epidemiology [14, 15, 16, 17, 18].
Knowledge of vector bionomics is of utmost importance for vector borne disease control measures that was relatively high among participants of the present study viz. 79.57 percent indicated that stagnant water bodies serving as potential mosquito breeding sites. Previous studies in Ethiopia have also confirmed similar findings [10, 14].
Pyrexia with shivering was known as common malarial symptom among respondents in our study that was supported by findings from other parts of world [7, 19].
In absence of tailor-made educational programs in Nigeria, the inappropriate awareness and outlook among indigenous people there were insufficient practices on the precautionary measures were leading to control malarial transmission. [20].
Although local drug shops, whose aptitude was uncertain, were not the popular treatment source (21.87%) in our study, yet they were alternatives to get initial treatment for perceived malaria. This over the counter drug prescription has been ignored in general across globe [21].
Researchers from north-India noted that increasing the level of perception of the community about malaria is of paramount importance to halt this avoidable illness [22].
A projected half of world inhabitants are at risk of malaria as an unique among diseases with its roots lie deep within human communities. Therefore understandings of the local paradigms are of supreme importance for the execution of socially apposite, justifiable, and operationally feasible options [23, 24, 25].
5. Conclusion
Majority of the study participants had adequate knowledge and ample enviable health seeking behaviour on Malaria. However, we have to overcome these major socio-demographic barriers to implement effective as well sustainable programs in the poor as well as anthropologically- diverse tribal peoples. Therefore, there is a re-orientation for future constructive outcome. We strongly feel that solution of malaria control lies on scientific expansion of primary care at the doorsteps of the grass root population tribal communities. The result of this study will augment the existing knowledge, so that the policy makers can formulate optimum strategies in public health advocacy scenarios.
6. Strengths of the Study
The strength of the study is that we could throw light on the societal risk correlates on re-emerging health issues to save the aborigines from preventable illness like malaria in the eastern part of India.
7. Limitations of the Study
Our study had several limitations as we could not include all the known risk factors related to Malaria like, knowledge about National Vector Borne Disease Control Program with advocacy of integrated vector management, role of daytime biting mosquitoes in spreading other diseases, concept of ‘dry day’, probability of death in Malaria.
8. Future Directions of the Study
In the next phase of our study we hope to conduct a multicentric study with added variables and hope to include tribal people from other parts of West Bengal.
Acknowledgment
We wish to thank the tribal community who participated in the study. We are grateful to their headman for his wholehearted sincere help to make our project a success in finding answer to our research question.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The authors declare that there is no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and /or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
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