Community Insights Into Societal Causes of and Solutions for Schistosomiasis Transmission in Lake Albert Fishing Villages: A Participatory Approach, 2021.
收藏DataCite Commons2025-02-21 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
http://reshare.ukdataservice.ac.uk/id/eprint/857628
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Uganda was at the forefront of preventative control programme implementation but within the country hotspots of schistosomiasis infection remain. Elimination of NTDs including schistosomiasis as a public health problem in all endemic countries is the international goal stated in the WHO Neglected Tropical Disease Roadmap for 2021–2030. To obtain this goal the roadmap calls for an integrated approach to control that includes behavioural change. To address behavioural change optimally, an understanding of social and economic factors that drive water contact, and by extension schistosomiasis transmission, is required; along with acceptance, willingness and ability to make these behavioural changes by community members. To achieve this a bottom-up approach to behavioural change programme design is desirable.
The data are the English language anonymised transcripts from an participatory study involving adult participants and emancipated minors (aged 16 and 17 years) from villages on the Lake Albert shoreline in Hoima District, Uganda - a known hotspot of schistosomiasis transmission. The transcripts capture the resource use that drives contact with the lake and the management of those resources; whether community members had the autonomy to change their behaviour if they wished and what help they thought was required to reduce water contact behaviours in their communities.
提供机构:
UK Data Service
创建时间:
2025-02-21



