Community engagement and antimalarial drugs medication as the first line of defense in the fight against antimalarial drug resistance in some endemic localities in Cameroon

IF 1.5 Q4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
David Denis Sofeu-Feugaing , Fabrice Nkengeh Ajonglefac , Marcel Nyuylam Moyeh , Marianne Elodie Essende , Vanessa Tita Jugha , Germain Sotoing Taiwe
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives

Malaria burden is primarily owing to resistance of parasites and vectors to frontline drugs and insecticides, respectively. Increasing awareness of factors contributing to parasite resistance to antimalarials within communities is crucial. This study assessed how community knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAPs) influence factors contributing to antimalarial resistance across four malaria ecological zones in Cameroon.

Methods

To accomplish this, structured questionnaires were administered to 980 volunteers from four geographical locations in English or French (the official languages of Cameroon). The data were organized and tested for normality. Spearman rank correlation was used to examine the connection between KAP and malaria.

Results

The mean KAP scores were 5.69 ± 1.47, 5.91 ± 1.25, and 5.66 ± 1.84, respectively, on a nine-point scale. Antimalarials commonly used were artemisinin-based combination therapies (37.96%), chloroquine (4.29%), quinine (22.24%), paracetamol (12.96%), and native drugs (19.80%). Up to 49.49% of the participants practiced self-medication, whereas 76.43% bought medications from licensed pharmacies, 10.61% bought from roadside vendors, and 23.57% relied on traditional/herbal medicines. We observed significant and medium positive linear correlations at P <0.01 between knowledge-attitude (r = 0.528), knowledge-practice (r = 0.400), and attitude-practice (r = 0.496).

Conclusions

Despite the general fair level of awareness of proper management and use of antimalarial drugs in the communities, the high level of self-medication and gross neglect of certain risk factors that may promote the emergence and spread of drug-resistant parasites is concerning.

社区参与与抗疟药物 在喀麦隆一些疟疾流行地区,药物治疗是抗击抗疟药物耐药性的第一道防线
目标 疟疾负担的主要原因是寄生虫和病媒分别对一线药物和杀虫剂产生抗药性。提高社区对导致寄生虫对抗疟药物产生抗药性的因素的认识至关重要。本研究评估了喀麦隆四个疟疾生态区的社区知识、态度和实践(KAPs)如何影响导致抗疟药物抗药性的因素。方法为了实现这一目标,研究人员用英语或法语(喀麦隆的官方语言)对来自四个地区的 980 名志愿者进行了结构化问卷调查。对数据进行了整理和正态性检验。结果 KAP 的平均得分分别为 5.69 ± 1.47、5.91 ± 1.25 和 5.66 ± 1.84(9 分制)。常用的抗疟药物为青蒿素类复方疗法(37.96%)、氯喹(4.29%)、奎宁(22.24%)、扑热息痛(12.96%)和本地药物(19.80%)。多达 49.49% 的受试者会自行用药,76.43% 的受试者会从有执照的药店购买药物,10.61% 的受试者会从路边小贩处购买药物,23.57% 的受试者会依赖传统/草药。我们观察到,在知识-态度(r = 0.528)、知识-实践(r = 0.400)和态度-实践(r = 0.496)之间存在明显的中度正线性相关(P <0.01)。结论尽管各社区对正确管理和使用抗疟药物的认识水平普遍较高,但令人担忧的是,自我用药的比例很高,而且严重忽视了某些可能会促进耐药性寄生虫出现和传播的风险因素。
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来源期刊
IJID regions
IJID regions Infectious Diseases
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
64 days
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