GeoHealth Centre, Institute for Hygiene and Public Health, University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
Water Institute, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2019 Jun 6;19(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s12914-019-0199-1.
Sub-Saharan African wetlands, settlement areas to growing populations, expose their users to diseases as necessary health infrastructure remains underdeveloped.
Mixed methods were adopted to assess the health-seeking behaviour of different exposure groups (farmers, pastoralists, service sector workers) in a Kenyan wetland community. Based on a cross-sectional survey (n = 400), syndromic surveillance was linked to health-seeking event analysis. In-depth interviews with community members (n = 20) and experts (n = 8) enabled the integration of healthcare user and provider perspectives.
Health-seeking behaviour in the wetland was determined by physical/infrastructural, natural/environmental, financial/socioeconomic and social/demographic factors, as well as human/cultural aspects such as traditional preferences rooted in health beliefs. Community members had different strategies of coping with ill-health and few symptoms remained untreated. Whether via a health care facility admission, the visit of a chemist, or the intake of pharmaceuticals or medicinal plants: treatment was usually applied either via a healthcare service provider or by the community members themselves. An undersupply of easy-to-reach healthcare options was detected, and healthcare services were not available and accessible to all. The widely-practiced self-treatment of symptoms, e.g. by use of local medicinal plants, mirrors both potential healthcare gaps and cultural preferences of wetland communities.
Integrated into an overall health-promoting wetland management approach, widely accepted (cultural) realities of health-seeking behaviours could complement health sector service provision and help ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all in wetlands.
撒哈拉以南非洲的湿地、人口不断增长的定居区,由于必要的卫生基础设施仍然欠发达,使居民面临疾病的威胁。
采用混合方法评估肯尼亚湿地社区中不同暴露群体(农民、牧民、服务部门工人)的寻医行为。基于横断面调查(n=400),症状监测与寻医事件分析相关联。对社区成员(n=20)和专家(n=8)进行深入访谈,使卫生保健用户和提供者的观点得以整合。
湿地的寻医行为受物理/基础设施、自然/环境、财务/社会经济以及社会/人口等因素的影响,同时还受到人类/文化方面的影响,如基于健康信仰的传统偏好。社区成员有不同的应对健康不良状况的策略,很少有症状未经治疗。无论是通过医疗保健机构住院治疗、访问药剂师还是服用药品或药用植物:治疗通常是通过医疗保健服务提供者或社区成员自己进行的。人们发现,容易获得的医疗保健选择供应不足,而且并非所有的人都能获得和利用医疗服务。广泛存在的自行治疗症状的做法,例如使用当地药用植物,反映了湿地社区潜在的医疗保健差距和文化偏好。
将广泛接受的(文化)寻医行为现实情况纳入整体促进健康的湿地管理方法中,可以补充卫生部门的服务提供,并有助于确保所有在湿地生活的人都能拥有健康的生活并促进福祉。