Assessment of uptake of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria among pregnant women attending antenatal clinic in public health facilities in Osogbo metropolis, Osun state, Nigeria
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
WHO recommends three or more doses of intermittent preventive treatment of Malaria with Sulfadoxine Pyrimethamine (IPTp-SP) for pregnant women living in areas of moderate-to-high malaria transmission in Africa to protect them and their babies from severe risks by malaria. Despite this, the coverage of utilization of a minimum of three doses of the drug is still very low in Nigeria. This study assessed the knowledge and utilisation of IPTp-SP among pregnant women attending antenatal clinics in public health facilities in Osogbo, Nigeria.
Methods
Descriptive cross-sectional was used, data were randomly collected from 549 respondents through a semi-structured self-administered questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, Pearson chi-square, and logistic regression were used for analysis.
Results
About half (49.4%) of the respondents had good overall knowledge of IPTp-SP, 72.2% took a minimum of one dose, and only 10.1 % took a minimum of three doses. Factors influencing the utilisation included drug affordability, SP shortage at the facility, and monitoring of pregnant women’s intake of SP. Logistic regression analysis indicated that pregnant women in primary and secondary healthcare settings were 2.4 times and 1.3 times respectively more likely to utilise IPTp than those in tertiary healthcare settings.
Conclusion and recommendation.
Almost half of the participants had good knowledge of IPTp-SP, only a few took four doses. Healthcare providers should organize IEC programmes to create more awareness among the public on the use and safety of SP in pregnancy. The government is to establish a mechanism to ensure a consistent supply of SP in all healthcare settings,
期刊介绍:
International Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences (IJANS) is an international scientific journal published by Elsevier. The broad-based journal was founded on two key tenets, i.e. to publish the most exciting research with respect to the subjects of Nursing and Midwifery in Africa, and secondly, to advance the international understanding and development of nursing and midwifery in Africa, both as a profession and as an academic discipline. The fully refereed journal provides a forum for all aspects of nursing and midwifery sciences, especially new trends and advances. The journal call for original research papers, systematic and scholarly review articles, and critical papers which will stimulate debate on research, policy, theory or philosophy of nursing as related to nursing and midwifery in Africa, technical reports, and short communications, and which will meet the journal''s high academic and ethical standards. Manuscripts of nursing practice, education, management, and research are encouraged. The journal values critical scholarly debate on issues that have strategic significance for educators, practitioners, leaders and policy-makers of nursing and midwifery in Africa. The journal publishes the highest quality scholarly contributions reflecting the diversity of nursing, and is also inviting international scholars who are engaged with nursing and midwifery in Africa to contribute to the journal. We will only publish work that demonstrates the use of rigorous methodology as well as by publishing papers that highlight the theoretical underpinnings of nursing and midwifery as it relates to the Africa context.