Suppr超能文献

瑞士和加拿大用于预防莱姆病的蜱虫控制干预措施的可接受性:一项混合方法研究。

Acceptability of tick control interventions to prevent Lyme disease in Switzerland and Canada: a mixed-method study.

作者信息

Aenishaenslin Cécile, Michel Pascal, Ravel André, Gern Lise, Waaub Jean-Philippe, Milord François, Bélanger Denise

机构信息

Research Group on Epidemiology of Zoonoses and Public Health, Pavillon de la santé publique, Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, CP 5000, Saint-Hyacinthe, J2S 7C6, Québec, Canada.

Département de pathologie et microbiologie, Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, CP 5000, Saint-Hyacinthe, J2S 7C6, Québec, Canada.

出版信息

BMC Public Health. 2016 Jan 5;16:12. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-2629-x.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Lyme disease control strategies may include tick control interventions in high risk areas. Public authorities may be interested to assess how these types of interventions are perceived by the public which may then impact their acceptability. The aims of this paper are to compare socio-cognitive factors associated with high acceptability of tick control interventions and to describe perceived issues that may explain their low acceptability in populations living in two different regions, one being an endemic region for LD since the last 30 years, the Neuchâtel canton, in Switzerland, and another where the disease is emerging, the Montérégie region, in Canada.

METHODS

A mixed methods' design was chosen. Quantitative data were collected using web-surveys conducted in both regions (n = 814). Multivariable logistic regressions were used to compare socio-cognitive factors associated with high acceptability of selected interventions. Qualitative data were collected using focus group's discussions to describe perceived issues relative to these interventions.

RESULTS

Levels of acceptability in the studied populations were the lowest for the use of acaricides and landscaping and were under 50 % in both regions for six out of eight interventions, but were higher overall in Montérégie. High perceived efficacy of the intervention was strongly associated with high acceptability of tick control interventions. A high perceived risk about LD was also associated with a high acceptability of intervention under some models. High level of knowledge about LD was negatively associated with high acceptability of the use of acaricides in Neuchâtel. Perceived issues explaining low acceptability included environmental impacts, high costs to the public system, danger of individual disempowerment and perceptions that tick control interventions were disproportionate options for the level of LD risk.

CONCLUSION

This study suggests that the perceived efficacy and LD risk perception may be key factors to target to increase the acceptability of tick control interventions. Community-level issues seem to be important considerations driving low acceptability of public health interventions. Results of this study highlight the importance for decision-makers to account for socio-cognitive factors and perceived issues that may affect the acceptability of public health interventions in order to maximize the efficacy of actions to prevent and control LD.

摘要

背景

莱姆病控制策略可能包括在高风险地区采取蜱虫控制干预措施。公共当局可能有兴趣评估公众对这些类型干预措施的看法,这可能会影响其可接受性。本文的目的是比较与蜱虫控制干预措施高可接受性相关的社会认知因素,并描述可能解释其在两个不同地区居民中可接受性较低的感知问题,其中一个地区是瑞士纳沙泰尔州,在过去30年里一直是莱姆病的流行地区,另一个地区是加拿大的蒙特利尔地区,该病正在那里出现。

方法

选择了混合方法设计。通过在两个地区进行的网络调查收集定量数据(n = 814)。使用多变量逻辑回归来比较与选定干预措施的高可接受性相关的社会认知因素。通过焦点小组讨论收集定性数据,以描述与这些干预措施相关的感知问题。

结果

在所研究的人群中,杀螨剂和景观美化措施的可接受程度最低,八项干预措施中有六项在两个地区的接受率均低于50%,但蒙特利尔地区的总体接受率更高。对干预措施的高感知效力与蜱虫控制干预措施的高可接受性密切相关。在某些模型下,对莱姆病的高感知风险也与干预措施的高可接受性相关。在纳沙泰尔,对莱姆病的高知识水平与杀螨剂使用的高可接受性呈负相关。解释低可接受性的感知问题包括环境影响、公共系统的高成本、个人丧失权力的危险以及认为蜱虫控制干预措施对于莱姆病风险水平而言是不成比例的选择。

结论

本研究表明,感知效力和莱姆病风险感知可能是提高蜱虫控制干预措施可接受性的关键目标因素。社区层面的问题似乎是导致公共卫生干预措施可接受性低的重要考虑因素。本研究结果强调了决策者考虑可能影响公共卫生干预措施可接受性的社会认知因素和感知问题的重要性,以便最大限度地提高预防和控制莱姆病行动的效力。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/bdb4/4700560/a8a3f046c61d/12889_2015_2629_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验