Bureau of International Medical Cooperation, National Center for Global Health and Medicine, 1-21-1 Toyama, Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.
Malar J. 2010 Apr 18;9:98. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-98.
School children have been increasingly recognized as health messengers for malaria control. However, little evidence is available. The objective of this study was to determine the impact of school-based malaria education intervention on school children and community adults.
This study was conducted in the Dangme-East district of the Greater Accra Region, Ghana, between 2007 and 2008. Trained schoolteachers designed participatory health education activities and led school children to disseminate messages related to malaria control to their communities. Three schools and their respective communities were chosen for the study and assigned to an intervention group (one school) and a control group (two schools). Questionnaire-based interviews and parasitological surveys were conducted before and after the intervention, with the intervention group (105 children, 250 community adults) and the control group (81 children, 133 community adults). Chi-square and Fisher's Exact tests were used to analyse differences in knowledge, practices, and parasite prevalence between pre- and post-intervention.
After the intervention, the misperception that malaria has multiple causes was significantly improved, both among children and community adults. Moreover, the community adults who treated a bed net with insecticide in the past six months, increased from 21.5% to 50.0% (p < 0.001). Parasite prevalence in school children decreased from 30.9% to 10.3% (p = 0.003). These positive changes were observed only in the intervention group.
This study suggests that the participatory health education intervention contributed to the decreased malaria prevalence among children. It had a positive impact not only on school children, but also on community adults, through the improvement of knowledge and practices. This strategy can be applied as a complementary approach to existing malaria control strategies in West African countries where school health management systems have been strengthened.
儿童作为疟疾控制的健康信使,其作用日益得到认可。但相关证据有限。本研究旨在确定基于学校的疟疾教育干预对学童和社区成年人的影响。
本研究于 2007 年至 2008 年在加纳大阿克拉地区的当格-东省进行。经过培训的学校教师设计了参与式健康教育活动,并指导学童向其社区传播与疟疾控制相关的信息。选择了三所学校及其各自的社区进行研究,并将其分为干预组(一所学校)和对照组(两所学校)。在干预前后,对干预组(105 名儿童,250 名社区成年人)和对照组(81 名儿童,133 名社区成年人)进行了基于问卷的访谈和寄生虫学调查。采用卡方检验和 Fisher 精确检验分析干预前后知识、实践和寄生虫流行率的差异。
干预后,儿童和社区成年人对疟疾有多种病因的误解明显减少。此外,过去六个月内用杀虫剂处理过蚊帐的社区成年人比例从 21.5%增加到 50.0%(p<0.001)。学童的寄生虫流行率从 30.9%降至 10.3%(p=0.003)。这些积极变化仅在干预组中观察到。
本研究表明,参与式健康教育干预有助于降低儿童的疟疾流行率。它不仅对学童,而且对社区成年人都产生了积极影响,提高了他们的知识和实践水平。在加强了学校卫生管理系统的西非国家,这种策略可以作为现有疟疾控制策略的补充方法。