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1.
BMC Public Health ; 9: 99, 2009 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19351401

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cholera remains a serious public health problem in low-income countries despite efforts in the past to promote oral rehydration therapy as major treatment. In 2007, the majority of worldwide cases (94%) and deaths (99%) were reported from Africa. To improve cholera control efforts in addition to maintaining and improving existing water supply, sanitation and hygiene behaviour measures, the World Health Organization has recently started to consider the use of vaccines as an additional public health tool. To assess this new approach in endemic settings, a project was launched in Zanzibar to vaccinate 50,000 individuals living in communities at high risk of cholera with an oral two-dose vaccine (Dukoral). Immunisation programmes in low-income countries have suffered a reduced coverage or were even brought to a halt because of an ignorance of local realities. To ensure the success of vaccination campaigns, implementers have to consider community-held perceptions and behaviours regarding the infectious disease and the vaccine of interest. The main aim of this study is to provide advice to the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare of Zanzibar regarding routine introduction of an oral cholera vaccine from a socioeconomic and behavioural perspective as part of a long-term development for a sustained cholera prevention strategy. METHODS AND DESIGN: Qualitative and quantitative methods of health social science research will be applied on four stakeholder levels before and after the mass vaccination campaign. Rapid assessment individual interviews and focus groups will be used to describe cholera- and vaccine-related views of policy makers, health care professionals and community representatives. The cultural epidemiological approach will be employed on the individual household resident level in a repeated cross-sectional design to estimate determinants of anticipated and actual oral cholera vaccine acceptance. DISCUSSION: The study presented here is designed to inform about people's perceptions regarding cholera and about socioeconomic and behavioural factors determining anticipated and actual oral cholera vaccine acceptance in Zanzibar. Its pre- and post-intervention design using a mixed-methods approach on different stakeholder levels in communities at high risk of cholera outbreaks will ensure the collection of locally valid data relevant for public health action and planning.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Cholera Vaccines/administration & dosage , Cholera/prevention & control , Health Services Needs and Demand , Administration, Oral , Adolescent , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Focus Groups , Health Services Research , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Socioeconomic Factors , Tanzania , Young Adult
2.
J Health Popul Nutr ; 25(4): 469-78, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18402191

ABSTRACT

This study was undertaken to develop a model to predict the incidence of typhoid in children based on adults' perception of prevalence of enteric fever in the wider community. Typhoid cases among children, aged 5-15 years, from epidemic regions in five Asian countries were confirmed with a positive Salmonella Typhi culture of the blood sample. Estimates of the prevalence of enteric fever were obtained from random samples of adults in the same study sites. Regression models were used for establishing the prediction equation. The percentages of enteric fever reported by adults and cases of typhoid incidence per 100,000, detected through blood culture were 4.7 and 24.18 for Viet Nam, 3.8 and 29.20 for China, 26.3 and 180.33 for Indonesia, 66.0 and 454.15 for India, and 52.7 and 407.18 for Pakistan respectively. An established prediction equation was: incidence of typhoid (1/100,000= -2.6946 + 7.2296 x reported prevalence of enteric fever (%) (F=31.7, p<0.01; R2=0.992). Using adults' perception of prevalence of disease as the basis for estimating its incidence in children provides a cost-effective behavioural epidemiologic method to facilitate prevention and control of the disease.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Perception , Salmonella typhi/isolation & purification , Typhoid Fever/epidemiology , Typhoid Fever/psychology , Adolescent , Asia/epidemiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Feces/microbiology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Population Surveillance , Predictive Value of Tests , Prevalence , Regression Analysis , Typhoid Fever/prevention & control
3.
Vaccine ; 24(4): 485-94, 2006 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16137802

ABSTRACT

We conducted a cross sectional survey of 3163 women and men in six Asian countries to examine willingness for children and adults to be vaccinated against shigellosis and other forms of dysentery. The six sites were clustered into three regions for ease of comparison. The regions are: Northeast Asia (China), Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam, and Indonesia) and South Asia (Bangladesh and Pakistan). We used multiple logistic regression to identify region-specific models for vaccination willingness for both adults and children. A vaccine to protect against dysentery, if available would be very much in demand throughout the three Asian regions for children. For adults, the responses indicate that vaccine uptake by adults will vary. A large proportion of respondents in all regions, specifically in China, do not perceive themselves at risk yet still consider a shigellosis vaccine desirable.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/methods , Dysentery, Bacillary/prevention & control , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Shigella Vaccines/administration & dosage , Adult , Asia , Child , Child, Preschool , Dysentery , Dysentery, Bacillary/psychology , Female , Humans , Immunization Programs , Infant , Male , Psychology , Public Health , Shigella Vaccines/immunology
4.
J Health Popul Nutr ; 22(3): 293-303, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15609782

ABSTRACT

Participation in vaccination campaigns worldwide, particularly the Expanded Programme on Immunization, has increased significantly in recent years. However, there remain multiple and integrated behavioural, sociocultural and political-economic barriers to vaccination. The Diseases of the Most Impoverished (DOMI) Programme has undertaken shigellosis disease-burden studies and oral cholera and typhoid Vi polysaccharide vaccine trials in seven Asian countries. As part of these projects, sociobehavioural studies have been undertaken to determine the potential demand for vaccines for these diseases and the obstacles and enabling factors that may affect acceptance, delivery, and use of vaccines. A theoretical model of acceptance of vaccination and a triangulation of qualitative and quantitative methods have been used for fully elucidating the range of issues relating to vaccination for shigellosis, cholera, and typhoid fever. In this paper, the theoretical and methodological basis of the DOMI projects has been reviewed in a context of current sociobehavioural research on the acceptability and desirability of vaccination.


Subject(s)
Developing Countries , Immunization Programs/organization & administration , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Poverty , Vaccination , Vaccines/supply & distribution , Global Health , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Research Design
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