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Knowledge, attitude, and practices toward malaria among hospital outpatients in Nangarhar, Afghanistan: A cross-sectional study

Knowledge, attitude, and practices toward malaria among hospital outpatients in Nangarhar, Afghanistan: A cross-sectional study
Knowledge, attitude, and practices toward malaria among hospital outpatients in Nangarhar, Afghanistan: A cross-sectional study

Background: In the Eastern Mediterranean region, Afghanistan ranks third for the world’s highest burden of malaria. The vast majority (95%) of malaria cases in Afghanistan are attributed to Plasmodium falciparum and 5% to Plasmodium vivax. Most cases occur in low-altitude regions, especially in the eastern province of Nangarhar, where agriculture and farming are predominant. To better understand the public sentiment toward malaria, this study aimed to understand the knowledge, attitude, and practice of patients toward malaria who visited public and private hospitals of Nangarhar province.

Methods: a cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted on Nangarhar residents who visited the adult Outpatient departments of eight local public and private health facilities. Data collection took place from 1st August 2022 to 15th September 2022.

Results: of 700 participants, 37.9% (n = 265) identified as male and 62.1% (n = 435) identified as female. The majority of participants (84.6 %) were within the (18–40) age range, followed by 12.7% in the (41–60) age range, and 2.7% were aged 61 years or older. Moreover, 99.7% (n = 698) of the participants had heard of malaria. The main sources of information about malaria were family members (31.3%, n = 219), television (32.6%, n = 228), Internet (12.6%, n = 88), school (11.3%, n = 79), and health facilities (31.4%, n = 220). Most respondents correctly identified mosquito bites as the primary mode of malaria transmission (72.6%, n = 508). Others suggested that transmission could occur by close contact with a malaria patient (14.0%, n = 98) and drinking contaminated water (17.3%, n = 121). The majority of participants (70.6%) agreed that malaria is a serious and life-threatening disease. A significant number of participants (96.6%) reported owning an insecticide-treated mosquito net at home, and 87.0% reported using the net.

Conclusion: overall, participants reported good knowledge, attitude, and practice toward malaria. This may be linked to the awareness campaigns and preventive programs in Nangarhar province that have contributed to participant’s willingness to prevent malaria and treat themselves if they get infected. Public health campaigns are difficult in Afghanistan with weak governance and conflict, and thus, populations may find themselves at risk if health promotion activities are stopped.

Afghanistan, Malaria, attitude, knowledge, practice
2050-3121
Nemat, Arash
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Sherzad, Abdul Ghafar
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Ehsan, Ehsanullah
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Hassnzai, Asadullah
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Naderi, Mehrab
a1261bc4-9275-49f5-a458-90bf728950ce
Zaki, Naqeebullah
461b0d9f-3e52-4468-b91b-5d462e8bc136
Essar, Mohammad Yasir
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Mowlabaccus, Wafaa Binti
bb28b393-515f-4df2-83af-9576bfd5fafe
Head, Michael G.
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Asady, Abdullah
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Nemat, Arash
e1d40469-1613-429f-b6bf-7a070c1cc7ce
Sherzad, Abdul Ghafar
0890559b-bbbe-4b06-a8a0-0c183c65c0be
Ehsan, Ehsanullah
1400bc9f-811e-4401-b919-a0d1a40b164f
Hassnzai, Asadullah
d03d1620-3da7-4473-bf47-1e95ebacb20f
Naderi, Mehrab
a1261bc4-9275-49f5-a458-90bf728950ce
Zaki, Naqeebullah
461b0d9f-3e52-4468-b91b-5d462e8bc136
Essar, Mohammad Yasir
7ba803fe-3f4d-4021-a9f8-1eb7eba3fd24
Mowlabaccus, Wafaa Binti
bb28b393-515f-4df2-83af-9576bfd5fafe
Head, Michael G.
67ce0afc-2fc3-47f4-acf2-8794d27ce69c
Asady, Abdullah
714aed04-a1dd-4851-9db7-c1a2a09f5d0f

Nemat, Arash, Sherzad, Abdul Ghafar, Ehsan, Ehsanullah, Hassnzai, Asadullah, Naderi, Mehrab, Zaki, Naqeebullah, Essar, Mohammad Yasir, Mowlabaccus, Wafaa Binti, Head, Michael G. and Asady, Abdullah (2024) Knowledge, attitude, and practices toward malaria among hospital outpatients in Nangarhar, Afghanistan: A cross-sectional study. Sage Open Medicine, 12. (doi:10.1177/20503121241251758).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: In the Eastern Mediterranean region, Afghanistan ranks third for the world’s highest burden of malaria. The vast majority (95%) of malaria cases in Afghanistan are attributed to Plasmodium falciparum and 5% to Plasmodium vivax. Most cases occur in low-altitude regions, especially in the eastern province of Nangarhar, where agriculture and farming are predominant. To better understand the public sentiment toward malaria, this study aimed to understand the knowledge, attitude, and practice of patients toward malaria who visited public and private hospitals of Nangarhar province.

Methods: a cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted on Nangarhar residents who visited the adult Outpatient departments of eight local public and private health facilities. Data collection took place from 1st August 2022 to 15th September 2022.

Results: of 700 participants, 37.9% (n = 265) identified as male and 62.1% (n = 435) identified as female. The majority of participants (84.6 %) were within the (18–40) age range, followed by 12.7% in the (41–60) age range, and 2.7% were aged 61 years or older. Moreover, 99.7% (n = 698) of the participants had heard of malaria. The main sources of information about malaria were family members (31.3%, n = 219), television (32.6%, n = 228), Internet (12.6%, n = 88), school (11.3%, n = 79), and health facilities (31.4%, n = 220). Most respondents correctly identified mosquito bites as the primary mode of malaria transmission (72.6%, n = 508). Others suggested that transmission could occur by close contact with a malaria patient (14.0%, n = 98) and drinking contaminated water (17.3%, n = 121). The majority of participants (70.6%) agreed that malaria is a serious and life-threatening disease. A significant number of participants (96.6%) reported owning an insecticide-treated mosquito net at home, and 87.0% reported using the net.

Conclusion: overall, participants reported good knowledge, attitude, and practice toward malaria. This may be linked to the awareness campaigns and preventive programs in Nangarhar province that have contributed to participant’s willingness to prevent malaria and treat themselves if they get infected. Public health campaigns are difficult in Afghanistan with weak governance and conflict, and thus, populations may find themselves at risk if health promotion activities are stopped.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2024
Published date: 16 May 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords: Afghanistan, Malaria, attitude, knowledge, practice

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491210
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491210
ISSN: 2050-3121
PURE UUID: b6659cf1-59ff-40f5-b236-564ad5ec7046
ORCID for Michael G. Head: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1189-0531

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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2024 16:49
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:53

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Contributors

Author: Arash Nemat
Author: Abdul Ghafar Sherzad
Author: Ehsanullah Ehsan
Author: Asadullah Hassnzai
Author: Mehrab Naderi
Author: Naqeebullah Zaki
Author: Mohammad Yasir Essar
Author: Wafaa Binti Mowlabaccus
Author: Michael G. Head ORCID iD
Author: Abdullah Asady

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