Community health priorities: Lessons for malaria prevention from Balaka district, Malawi
IntroductionCommunication to address priority health challenges typically draws on epidemiological research in conjunction with referencing global and country strategies. While community-level perspectives on health challenges typically align with national priorities, nuances and barriers that const...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Malawi medical journal 2019-05, Vol.30 (2) |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | IntroductionCommunication to address priority health challenges
typically draws on epidemiological research in conjunction with
referencing global and country strategies. While community-level
perspectives on health challenges typically align with national
priorities, nuances and barriers that constrain health response may be
less well known. To deepen understanding of the relation between
situational aspects of health and ways of making meaning, community
insights into health priorities were explored. MethodsAction Media, an
established participatory research methodology for informing health
communication design and strategy, was undertaken with parents of
children under 5 in Balaka District, Malawi. ResultsParticipants
identified malaria as a priority concern in their community. While it
was reported that there was strong commitment to consistent use of long
lasting insecticide treated nets, there was frustration that malaria
incidence remained high. It was observed that risk of exposure to
mosquito bites was increased as a result of chores and other activities
that extended into the early evenings prior to retiring to bed under a
bed net. Bed bug infestations were said to be a common and ongoing
concern. Some community members alleviated discomfort by abandoning
their beds and sleeping outside without adequate protection while
others boiled their bed nets to remove bed bugs. Accessing distant
health facilities when ill with malaria was difficult for adults and
children. Participants identified the need for effective strategies to
address these concerns including accessing mosquito repellant,
eradicating bed bugs, treating malaria locally and collaborating in
malaria control activities. ConclusionsMeeting targets for malaria
prevention requires consideration of contextual factors that undermine
effective malaria prevention in affected communities. Such factors are
not immediately apparent through epidemiological data. Regularly
assessing contextual challenges in high malaria incidence areas
provides opportunities to understand gaps, to refine intervention
strategies and to inform communication programming. |
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ISSN: | 1995-7262 |