نبذة مختصرة : Background: Epilepsy is the most common neurological disease in the world, affecting 50 million people, with the majority living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). A major focus of epilepsy treatment in LMICs has been task-sharing the identification and care for epilepsy by community health workers (CHWs). The present study aimed to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAPs) of CHWs towards epilepsy in Mozambique. Methods: One hundred and thirty-five CHWs completed a questionnaire that included socio-demographic characteristics and 44-items divided into six subscales pertaining to KAPs towards epilepsy (QKAP-EPI) across nine districts of Sofala, Mozambique. The internal consistency was examined to evaluate the reliability of the instrument (QKAP-EPI). The association between sociodemographic variables and QKAP-EPI subscales was examined using linear regression models. Results: The internal consistency was moderate for two subscales (causes of epilepsy, α = 0.65; medical treatment, α = 0.694), acceptable for cultural treatment (α = 0.797) and excellent for 2 subscales (safety and risks, α = 0.926; negative attitudes, α = 0.904). Overall, CHWs demonstrated accurate epilepsy knowledge (medical treatment: mean = 1.63, SD = 0.28; safety/risks: mean = 1.62, SD = 0.59). However, CHWs reported inaccurate epilepsy knowledge of the causes, negative attitudes, as well as culturally specific treatments for epilepsy, such as: “if a person with epilepsy burns when set on fire they cannot be treated”. Knowl- edge about how to manage epileptic seizures varied across the different emergency care practices, from the accurate belief that it is not advisable to place objects in the individual’s mouth during an epileptic seizure, to the wrong perception of the need to hold the person in seizures to control seizures. Heterogeneity in the level of epilepsy knowledge was observed among CHWs, when consid- ering epilepsy according to the local names as treatable (“Dzumba”) and other forms as untreatable ...
Relation: IJERPH: International Journal of Environmental Research in Public Health; https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/19/22/15420; Cumbe, V.F.J.; Greene, C.; Fumo, A.M.T.; Fumo, H.; Mabunda, D.; Gouveia, L.C.; Oquendo, M.A.; Duarte, C.S.; Sidat, M.; Mari, J.d.J. Community health workers’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards epilepsy in Sofala, central Mozambique. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15420. https://doi.org/10.3390/ ijerph192215420; https://repositorio.unifesp.br/11600/65988; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215420
No Comments.