ABSTRACT
The study was conducted in 5 randomly selected communities in the Wassa West district
in the Western region of Ghana using both qualitative and quantitative methods to obtain
mothers or caregiver’s knowledge on symptoms of childhood malaria (uncomplicated and
complicated) in children under five years of age in relation to its management. A total of
300 caregivers were interviewed using a structured questionnaire. Majority of the
respondents were mothers constituting 79%. Although the study population was made up
of different ethnic groups, the local term used to represent a cluster of symptoms
synonymous with the clinical diagnosis of malaria was “ebun" or "fever” which were
used interchangeably. All mothers or caregivers named one or more signs by which they
recognized the disease. The percentage of mothers or caregivers who perceived
symptoms of malaria in small children to be fever was found to be 91%. Fever (hot
body), vomiting and loss of appetite were the three most common signs mentioned.
Although 89% of mothers or caregivers had access to a health facility, this does not
appear to influence their treatment seeking behaviour. This is indicated by the fact that as
many as 60% managed their child’s disease at home and used both traditional and
modem treatment. The commonest anti-malaria drug was chloroquine. This is a
significant finding considering the upsurge of chloroquine resistance, although
chloroquine is still currently Ghana’s official first line drug for treating malaria. 74.8% of
mothers or caregivers treated children under-5 years with malaria at home for 3 days.
Poverty was a major factor that encouraged home treatment as confirmed by the fact that
55% of them treated their ill children at home because they had no money to send the
child to hospital. The delay in seeking early appropriate treatment may be the cause of the
high under-5 mortality. Higher level of education of mothers or caregivers was
significantly associated with promptness of sending their sick children to clinic/hospital
at the onset of the illness. However, in the event child did not recover with selfmedication,
85% of mothers or caregivers would send their children with malaria to clinic
or hospital. The results of the study call for prompt educational action targeting mothers
for the correct treatment of both complicated and uncomplicated malaria in children
under-5 years.
DZOTSI, E (2021). Treatment Practices For Malaria In Small Children By Caregivers In The Wassa West District Of Ghana. Afribary. Retrieved from https://tracking.afribary.com/works/treatment-practices-for-malaria-in-small-children-by-caregivers-in-the-wassa-west-district-of-ghana
DZOTSI, EMMANUEL "Treatment Practices For Malaria In Small Children By Caregivers In The Wassa West District Of Ghana" Afribary. Afribary, 14 Apr. 2021, https://tracking.afribary.com/works/treatment-practices-for-malaria-in-small-children-by-caregivers-in-the-wassa-west-district-of-ghana. Accessed 27 Nov. 2024.
DZOTSI, EMMANUEL . "Treatment Practices For Malaria In Small Children By Caregivers In The Wassa West District Of Ghana". Afribary, Afribary, 14 Apr. 2021. Web. 27 Nov. 2024. < https://tracking.afribary.com/works/treatment-practices-for-malaria-in-small-children-by-caregivers-in-the-wassa-west-district-of-ghana >.
DZOTSI, EMMANUEL . "Treatment Practices For Malaria In Small Children By Caregivers In The Wassa West District Of Ghana" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 27, 2024. https://tracking.afribary.com/works/treatment-practices-for-malaria-in-small-children-by-caregivers-in-the-wassa-west-district-of-ghana