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Uso de redes mosquiteras impregnadas con insecticida entre mujeres embarazadas y factores asociados en una población predominantemente rural al norte de Etiopia
Author(s) -
Belay Mebrahtom,
Deressa Wakgari
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
tropical medicine and international health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.056
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1365-3156
pISSN - 1360-2276
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2008.02159.x
Subject(s) - malaria , environmental health , malaria prevention , medicine , logistic regression , bed nets , population , public health , rural area , demography , health services , nursing , pathology , sociology , immunology
Summary Objective  To describe the use of insecticide treated nets (ITNs) among pregnant women and examine factors associated with its access and use. Methods  Community‐based cross‐sectional study of 815 pregnant women in eight malarious kebeles in northern Ethiopia based on two‐stage cluster design from May to June 2006. Knowledge on malaria, its cause and preventive measures; treatment seeking behaviour; possession and use of ITNs by pregnant women and under‐five children were ascertained through interview and observation. Logistic regression was used to determine factors associated with ITNs use. Results  Knowledge about the cause, transmission and preventive measures of malaria was relatively good; 90.2% of women associated malaria with mosquito bites and 94.2% with living near water ponds. Ten per cent reported malaria illness within the 14 days before the survey, and sought treatment mainly from public health facilities (56.5%) and community health workers (37.6%). Of 815 households surveyed, 59% owned at least one non‐long lasting or long‐lasting ITN (59.5% rural vs. 54.5% urban; P  = 0.401). Lack of access to ITNs (68.3%) and the perception that nets could not prevent malaria (27%) were the main reasons for non‐ownership of nets. A total of 58.4% of 481 pregnant women from households owning at least one ITN had slept under it during the previous night. Fewer rural (56.7%) than urban women (76.2%) used ITNs ( P  = 0.001). In 57.6% of households with at least one ITN, under‐five children had used it the night before. Higher educational attainment was an important predictor of ITNs use (OR = 3.1, 95% CI = 2.1, 4.6). Conclusions  Household ownership of ITNs and their use by pregnant women is promising with the current efforts to scale‐up ITNs implementation, but the gap between ownership and use remains high. Consistent and proper use of nets by pregnant women should be ensured through information campaigns. Rapid expansion of access to long lasting ITNs requires that government and NGOs supply them in adequate numbers.

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