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边缘化部落社区疟疾控制的障碍:一项定性研究

Barriers to malaria control among marginalized tribal communities: a qualitative study.

作者信息

Sundararajan Radhika, Kalkonde Yogeshwar, Gokhale Charuta, Greenough P Gregg, Bang Abhay

机构信息

Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.

Society for Education, Action and Research in Community Health (SEARCH), Gadchiroli, Maharashtra, India.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2013 Dec 20;8(12):e81966. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081966. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Malaria infection accounts for over one million deaths worldwide annually. India has the highest number of malaria deaths outside Africa, with half among Indian tribal communities. Our study sought to identify barriers to malaria control within tribal populations in malaria-endemic Gadchiroli district, Maharashtra.

METHODS AND FINDINGS

This qualitative study was conducted via focus groups and interviews with 84 participants, and included tribal villagers, traditional healers, community health workers (CHWs), medical officers, and district officials. Questions assessed knowledge about malaria, behavior during early stages of infection, and experiences with prevention among tribal villagers and traditional healers. CHWs, medical officers, and district officials were asked about barriers to treating and preventing malaria among tribal populations. Data were inductively analyzed and assembled into broader explanation linking barriers to geographical, cultural and social factors. Findings indicate lack of knowledge regarding malaria symptoms and transmission. Fever cases initially present to traditional healers or informal providers who have little knowledge of malaria or high-risk groups such as children and pregnant women. Tribal adherence with antimalarial medications is poor. Malaria prevention is inadequate, with low-density and inconsistent use of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs). Malaria educational materials are culturally inappropriate, relying on dominant language literacy. Remote villages and lack of transport complicate surveillance by CHWs. Costs of treating malaria outside the village are high.

CONCLUSIONS

Geographic, cultural, and social factors create barriers to malaria control among tribal communities in India. Efforts to decrease malaria burden among these populations must consider such realities. Our results suggest improving community-level knowledge about malaria using culturally-appropriate health education materials; making traditional healers partners in malaria control; promoting within-village rapid diagnosis and treatment; increasing ITN distribution and promoting their use as potential strategies to decrease infection rates in these communities. These insights may be used to shape malaria control programs among marginalized populations.

摘要

背景

疟疾感染每年在全球导致超过一百万人死亡。印度是非洲以外疟疾死亡人数最多的国家,其中一半发生在印度部落社区。我们的研究旨在确定马哈拉施特拉邦疟疾流行的加德奇罗利地区部落人群中疟疾控制的障碍。

方法与结果

这项定性研究通过焦点小组和对84名参与者的访谈进行,参与者包括部落村民、传统治疗师、社区卫生工作者(CHW)、医务人员和地区官员。问题评估了关于疟疾的知识、感染早期的行为以及部落村民和传统治疗师的预防经验。询问了CHW、医务人员和地区官员关于部落人群中治疗和预防疟疾的障碍。对数据进行归纳分析,并汇总成将障碍与地理、文化和社会因素联系起来的更广泛解释。研究结果表明,对疟疾症状和传播缺乏了解。发热病例最初会去找对疟疾或儿童和孕妇等高风险群体了解甚少的传统治疗师或非正规医疗服务提供者。部落人群对抗疟药物的依从性很差。疟疾预防措施不足,杀虫剂处理蚊帐(ITN)的使用密度低且不一致。疟疾教育材料在文化上不合适,依赖于主流语言读写能力。偏远村庄和交通不便使CHW的监测工作复杂化。在村外治疗疟疾的费用很高。

结论

地理、文化和社会因素给印度部落社区的疟疾控制造成了障碍。减轻这些人群疟疾负担的努力必须考虑到这些现实情况。我们的结果表明,使用适合文化背景的健康教育材料提高社区层面关于疟疾的知识;让传统治疗师成为疟疾控制的合作伙伴;促进村内快速诊断和治疗;增加ITN的分发并推广其使用,作为降低这些社区感染率的潜在策略。这些见解可用于制定边缘化人群中的疟疾控制项目。

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