Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy. / Tarimo, D S; Lwihula, G K; Minjas, J N; Bygbjerg, I C.

In: Tropical Medicine & International Health, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2000, p. 179-84.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tarimo, DS, Lwihula, GK, Minjas, JN & Bygbjerg, IC 2000, 'Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy', Tropical Medicine & International Health, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 179-84.

APA

Tarimo, D. S., Lwihula, G. K., Minjas, J. N., & Bygbjerg, I. C. (2000). Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy. Tropical Medicine & International Health, 5(3), 179-84.

Vancouver

Tarimo DS, Lwihula GK, Minjas JN, Bygbjerg IC. Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy. Tropical Medicine & International Health. 2000;5(3):179-84.

Author

Tarimo, D S ; Lwihula, G K ; Minjas, J N ; Bygbjerg, I C. / Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy. In: Tropical Medicine & International Health. 2000 ; Vol. 5, No. 3. pp. 179-84.

Bibtex

@article{6303a2e0e61411ddbf70000ea68e967b,
title = "Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy",
abstract = "Prior to an intervention on improving the quality of malaria case management, we assessed mothers' abilities to recognize nonsevere and severe/complicated malaria in children when a child has fever with other physiological and behavioural symptoms associated with malaria. Malaria was mentioned as the commonest febrile illness (94. 1%), convulsions the least (11.4%). Fever and enteric symptoms featured as the most important symptoms of childhood malaria at frequencies of 93.5% and 73.8%, respectively. The need for laboratory diagnosis was very high (98.3%), the reason being to get accurate diagnosis and treatment (89.4%). Poor outcome of treatment was ascribed to incorrect diagnosis and prescription, noncompliance at home and ineffective drugs (62.1%). Most mothers (86.6%) would take antipyretic measures first when a child has fever, and subsequently the majority (92.9%) would seek care at a modern health facility. About 50% of the mothers would give traditional treatments for childhood convulsions and wait till fits cease before the next action. A high proportion of the mothers (75%) held the belief that an injection in a child with high fever would precipitate convulsions or death. The implications of these findings for chemotherapeutic malaria control in holoendemic areas within the context of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI) strategy are discussed.",
author = "Tarimo, {D S} and Lwihula, {G K} and Minjas, {J N} and Bygbjerg, {I C}",
note = "Keywords: Adolescent; Adult; Antimalarials; Child, Preschool; Cross-Sectional Studies; Delivery of Health Care, Integrated; Endemic Diseases; Female; Fever; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Humans; Infant; Malaria; Malaria, Cerebral; Male; Medicine, Traditional; Middle Aged; Mothers; Questionnaires; Seizures; Tanzania; Treatment Failure",
year = "2000",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "179--84",
journal = "Tropical Medicine & International Health",
issn = "1360-2276",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mothers' perceptions and knowledge on childhood malaria in the holendemic Kibaha district, Tanzania: implications for malaria control and the IMCI strategy

AU - Tarimo, D S

AU - Lwihula, G K

AU - Minjas, J N

AU - Bygbjerg, I C

N1 - Keywords: Adolescent; Adult; Antimalarials; Child, Preschool; Cross-Sectional Studies; Delivery of Health Care, Integrated; Endemic Diseases; Female; Fever; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Humans; Infant; Malaria; Malaria, Cerebral; Male; Medicine, Traditional; Middle Aged; Mothers; Questionnaires; Seizures; Tanzania; Treatment Failure

PY - 2000

Y1 - 2000

N2 - Prior to an intervention on improving the quality of malaria case management, we assessed mothers' abilities to recognize nonsevere and severe/complicated malaria in children when a child has fever with other physiological and behavioural symptoms associated with malaria. Malaria was mentioned as the commonest febrile illness (94. 1%), convulsions the least (11.4%). Fever and enteric symptoms featured as the most important symptoms of childhood malaria at frequencies of 93.5% and 73.8%, respectively. The need for laboratory diagnosis was very high (98.3%), the reason being to get accurate diagnosis and treatment (89.4%). Poor outcome of treatment was ascribed to incorrect diagnosis and prescription, noncompliance at home and ineffective drugs (62.1%). Most mothers (86.6%) would take antipyretic measures first when a child has fever, and subsequently the majority (92.9%) would seek care at a modern health facility. About 50% of the mothers would give traditional treatments for childhood convulsions and wait till fits cease before the next action. A high proportion of the mothers (75%) held the belief that an injection in a child with high fever would precipitate convulsions or death. The implications of these findings for chemotherapeutic malaria control in holoendemic areas within the context of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI) strategy are discussed.

AB - Prior to an intervention on improving the quality of malaria case management, we assessed mothers' abilities to recognize nonsevere and severe/complicated malaria in children when a child has fever with other physiological and behavioural symptoms associated with malaria. Malaria was mentioned as the commonest febrile illness (94. 1%), convulsions the least (11.4%). Fever and enteric symptoms featured as the most important symptoms of childhood malaria at frequencies of 93.5% and 73.8%, respectively. The need for laboratory diagnosis was very high (98.3%), the reason being to get accurate diagnosis and treatment (89.4%). Poor outcome of treatment was ascribed to incorrect diagnosis and prescription, noncompliance at home and ineffective drugs (62.1%). Most mothers (86.6%) would take antipyretic measures first when a child has fever, and subsequently the majority (92.9%) would seek care at a modern health facility. About 50% of the mothers would give traditional treatments for childhood convulsions and wait till fits cease before the next action. A high proportion of the mothers (75%) held the belief that an injection in a child with high fever would precipitate convulsions or death. The implications of these findings for chemotherapeutic malaria control in holoendemic areas within the context of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI) strategy are discussed.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 10747280

VL - 5

SP - 179

EP - 184

JO - Tropical Medicine & International Health

JF - Tropical Medicine & International Health

SN - 1360-2276

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 9830529