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Adherence towards COVID‐19 prevention measures and associated factors in Hossana town, South Ethiopia, 2021
Author(s) -
Tamirat Temesgen,
Abute Lonsako
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of clinical practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1742-1241
pISSN - 1368-5031
DOI - 10.1111/ijcp.14530
Subject(s) - medicine , pandemic , environmental health , logistic regression , hand washing , covid-19 , cross sectional study , confidence interval , descriptive statistics , systematic sampling , sample size determination , demography , disease , hygiene , infectious disease (medical specialty) , pathology , statistics , mathematics , sociology
The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID‐19) disease is a pandemic threat for humanity's healthcare system, social, economic, and psychological well‐being for both developed and developing nations. In the case of developing nations such as the resource of Ethiopia, however, the key obstacle is to buy the vaccine and administer it to their people. In the study area, however, the degree of adherence to the COVID‐19 preventive measure was not well‐established. The aim of this study is to determine adherence to COVID‐19 prevention measures in Hossana town. Methods From 3 to 29 January 2021, a community‐based cross‐sectional study was conducted among individuals living in the Hosanna town. We used a sample size of 384. The sample size was distributed to all eight kebeles in proportion to the size of the households contained in each kebele in the town of Hossana. Systematic sampling methods were used, and both descriptive and advanced analysis data were entered into Epi‐data and exported to SPSS. Binary logistic regression was used to identify variables associated with adherence to preventive measures for COVID‐19. Result A total of 377 were included in the study with the response rate of 98.2%. The percentage of the study participants that had good adherence with the COVID‐19 preventive measures is 50.4%. 145 (38.5%) of all respondents had poor knowledge on COVID‐19 preventive measures, and 40.3% had poor COVID‐19 transmission methods knowledge. Age (AOR: 0.34; 95% confidence interval [CI] [0.131‐0.912]), educational status (AOR: 0.32; 95% CI [0.165‐0.632]), marital status (AOR: 2; % CI [1.191‐3.803]), family size (AOR: 2.4; % CI [1.322‐4.366]), and COVID‐19 complication (AOR: 0.49:95% CI [0.242‐0.979]) were significantly associated with COVID‐19 prevention measurement adherence in multivariate analysis. Conclusion This study found that approximately half of the participants had poor adherence to COVID‐19 preventive measures. Factors associated with COVID‐19 preventive measures were age, educational status, marital status, family size, and heard about complication of COVID‐19 were associated with preventive measures.

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