Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6137433 | Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2008 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Buruli ulcer is a devastating condition emerging in West Africa. We investigated why patients often report late to the hospital. Health seeking behaviour determinants and stigma were studied by in-depth interviews in patients treated in hospital (n = 107), patients treated traditionally (n = 46) of whom 22 had active disease, and healthy community control subjects (n = 107). We developed a model capturing internal and external factors affecting decision making. With increasing severity, extent and duration of Buruli ulcer, a shift of influencing factors on health seeking behaviour appears to occur. Factors causing delay in presenting to hospital were the use of traditional medicine before presenting at the treatment centre; costs and duration of admission; disease considered not serious enough; witchcraft perceived as the cause of disease; and fear of treatment, which patients expected to be amputation. This study confirms the importance of self-treatment and traditional healing in this area. Our study was performed before antimicrobial treatment was introduced in Benin; we suggest that this model and the results from this analysis should be used as a baseline from which to measure the influence of the introduction of antimicrobial treatment on health seeking behaviour for Buruli ulcer in Benin.
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Authors
Annelies A. Mulder, Roelien P. Boerma, Yves Barogui, Claude Zinsou, R. Christian Johnson, Jules Gbovi, Tjip S. van der Werf, Ymkje Stienstra,