Knowledge and on use practices of ORS/zinc on useinofdiarrhea ORS/zinc management in diarrhea among management under among five year under old children five yearinold Narok children South, in Narok South, Kenya Kenya Josephat Nyagero, Moses Mwangi, Elijah Mbiti, Bob Akach, Jacqueline Kung’u, Stewart Kabaka, Christopher Wanyoike, John Nduba Safari Park Hotel, Nairobi November 25, 2014 Background • Kenya unlikely to meet MDG goal 4 • High impact child survival interventions implemented • Diarrhea contributes >20% U5 child mortality (Black et al, 2010) • Early management of childhood diarrhea through: – Breastfeeding, good hygiene practices and – ORS & zinc supplementation to avoid severe illness and death Background • Access to correct information and to ORS and zinc at community level remains a major bottleneck • 39% of children with diarrhea received ORS treatment and <1% zinc yet 80% of mothers knew about ORS (KDHS 2008-9) • Purpose of this paper is to assess the factors associated with the mother’s/ caregiver’s knowledge on diarrhea prevention and control ORS/ zinc cluster randomized project design 58 sub-locations Sub-locations with CHU (18) Sub-locations without CHU (40) Eligible based on population size (15) Eligible based on population size (23) Simple random sample (SRS) Simple random sample (SRS) 11 sub-locations or clusters 11 sub-locations or clusters Randomization Randomization 5 Intervention group clusters 6 Comparison group clusters 6 intervention group clusters 5 Comparison group clusters Methodology • Narok south district of Narok County in Kenya • 22 sub-locations out of 58 (11 intervention, 11 control) • Targeted all women with children U5s • Information on 500 U5 children in each sub-location • Household Questionnaires adapted UNICEF’s Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey tools used for 2009-2011 data • Back translated into Maasai and Kipsigis and pretested • Administered by trained research assistants locally recruited • Data entry done using SPSS • Logistic regression at the 95% confidence interval Table 1: Selected socio-demographic characteristics of the study participants Variables Intervention/Control Intervention Cluster Control Cluster Gender of Respondent Male Female Age of Respondent Grouped <20 yrs 20 to 29 yrs 30 to 39 yrs 40 to 49 yrs 50 to 59 yrs 60 yrs and above Not known Mother's highest level of education Primary Secondary College/university None Number of children One Two Three Four or more n=6683 % 3306 3377 49.5 50.5 364 6319 5.4 94.6 516 3239 1582 479 95 39 733 7.7 48.5 23.7 7.2 1.4 0.6 11.0 2320 456 175 3732 34.7 6.8 2.6 55.8 3449 2346 837 51 51.6 35.1 12.5 0.8 Table 2: Household hygiene and sanitation Variables Drinking water treated Yes No Water storage in the Household Open container Covered container Same fetching container Utensils washed and put on a drying rack Yes No Compound clean or littered Clean Littered Dwelling Clean Yes No n=6683 % 1040 5643 15.6 84.4 724 1938 4021 10.8 29.0 60.2 4367 2316 65.3 34.7 3354 3329 50.2 49.8 4439 2244 66.4 33.6 Table 3: Source of information on prevention and treatment of childhood diarrhea Variables n=6683 % Public Health facility 4238 63.4 Family members 1673 25.0 Private Health facility 740 11.1 Herbalists 334 5.0 CHWs 306 4.6 Community training 256 3.8 Radio newspapers 211 3.2 Church 82 1.2 Written pamphlets 68 1.0 AMREF 2 0.03 Responses on selected knowledge issues • What diarrhea is? – universal • Ever heard of ORS - 70.8% • Ever heard of zinc - 16.5% • Action to take if diarrhea is identified – 51.3% seek treatment immediately – 45.7% seek treatment if persist – 6.5% seek treatment if bloody Figure 2: Overall Knowledge on prevention and control of diarrhea 34.5% 65.5% Adequate knowledge Inadequate knowledge Table 4: Knowledge on prevention and control of diarrhea in relation to selected socio-demographic characteristics Adequate knowledge (n=4,378) Characteristics Intervention/Control Intervention Cluster Control Cluster Age of the Respondent <20 yrs 20 to 29 yrs 30 to 39 yrs 40 to 49 yrs 50 to 59 yrs 60 yrs and abve Dont Know Gender of Respondent Male Female Mother's highest level of education None/Primary Secondary College/university Number of children per household One Two Three Four or more Inadequate knowledge (n=2,305) n % n % OR p value 2188 2190 66.2 64.9 1118 1187 33.8 35.1 1.06 1.00 0.252 312 2153 1073 318 55 18 449 60.5 66.5 67.8 66.4 57.9 46.2 61.3 204 1086 509 161 40 21 284 39.5 33.5 32.2 33.6 42.1 53.8 38.7 1.78 2.31 2.46 2.30 1.60 1.00 1.84 0.083 0.010 0.006 0.013 0.217 213 4165 58.5 65.9 151 2154 41.5 34.1 1.00 1.37 0.004 3898 334 146 64.4% 73.2% 83.4% 2154 122 29 35.6% 26.8% 16.6% 1.00 1.51 2.78 <0.001 <0.001 2256 1539 547 36 65.4 65.6 65.4 70.6 1193 807 290 15 34.6 34.4 34.6 29.4 0.79 0.79 0.79 1.00 0.064 0.441 0.459 0.446 Table 5: Knowledge on prevention and control of diarrhea in relation to Household hygiene and sanitation Adequate knowledge (n=4,378) Inadequate knowledge (n=2,305) n % n % 789 75.9 251 24.1 3589 63.6 2054 384 53.0 Covered container 1243 Same fetching container Characteristics Drinking water treated OR p value <0.001 36.4 1.80 1.00 340 47.0 1.00 64.1 695 35.9 1.58 <0.001 2751 68.4 1270 31.6 1.92 <0.001 Yes No Compound clean or littered 2962 67.8 1405 32.2 <0.001 1416 61.1 900 38.9 1.34 1.00 clean littered Dwelling Clean 2310 68.9 1044 31.1 <0.001 2068 62.1 1261 37.9 1.35 1.00 3006 67.7 1433 32.3 <0.001 1372 61.1 872 38.9 1.33 1.00 Yes No Water storage in the Household Open container Utensils washed and put on a drying rack Yes No Table 6: Factors associated with knowledge on prevention and control of diarrhea among the study participants Variables Gender of the Respondent Male Female Mother's highest level of education None/Primary Secondary College/university Dwelling Clean Yes No Public Health facility Yes No AOR 95% CI of AOR p Lower Upper value 1.00 1.49 1.19 1.85 0.001 1.00 1.46 2.33 1.17 1.54 1.83 3.53 0.001 <0.001 1.24 1.00 1.11 1.38 <0.001 1.88 1.00 1.67 2.10 <0.001 Conclusion • being female and having secondary level of education, • dwelling in HHs with clean compound and, • obtaining information from public health facilities are associated with adequate knowledge on prevention and treatment of childhood diarrhea Recommendation Long term • supporting girl-child education in the area Short term • concerted effort to promotion clean dwelling compounds through multiple approaches using community structures • strengthen health facilities as sources of health information to care givers and diversify as may be appropriate