Abstract

BackgroundWorldwide about 4 million newborns die each year; of which around 600,000 newborns die from series bacterial infections. To reduce newborn death, community based newborn care is being implemented in Ethiopia though its utilization by clients is low. Studies conducted to address perception of the community towards newborn illnesses are limited. Therefore, this study was aimed in exploring community member’s perception, experiences and health seeking behavior towards newborn illnesses.MethodsA descriptive qualitative study was conducted from March 11– April 7, 2019 in Debre Libanos District, Ethiopia. Study participants were recruited purposively from six kebeles and women delivered within two months prior to data collection were the primary study participants. Five in-depth interviews, seven key informant interviews and three focused group discussions were conducted. Data were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, translated, and analyzed using inductive thematic analysis in Atlas ti.7.1 software package.ResultThis study found that community members locally diagnose newborn illnesses as sunburn, evil eye, kichitat, megagna, berd, enlarged/dropping of uvula, and common cold from misconceived cause when unspecific types of symptoms are recognized on newborns. For those locally diagnosed newborn illnesses, they primarily prefer traditional medications to manage the illnesses rather than seeking care from health facilities. This study also found that clients seek health care for these newborn illnesses late. They seek care either from traditional or from health facilities when newborns become unable to breast feed, weak and feeling too hot.ConclusionLocal newborn illness diagnosis negatively affected health seeking behavior of the community members in that they made them to rely on traditional medications or delay in seeking care from health facilities. This might leads to negative consequences like disability and mortality. Therefore, health care providers and policy makers should design social and behavioral change communication (SBCC) to change community member’s health seeking behavior towards newborn illnesses.

Highlights

  • Worldwide, about 4 million newborn babies die each year; of which about two-thirds of deaths occur in the first month of life

  • This study found that community members locally diagnose newborn illnesses as sunburn, evil eye, kichitat, megagna, berd, enlarged/dropping of uvula, and common cold from misconceived cause when unspecific types of symptoms are recognized on newborns

  • Local newborn illness diagnosis negatively affected health seeking behavior of the community members in that they made them to rely on traditional medications or delay in seeking care from health facilities

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Summary

Introduction

About 4 million newborn babies die each year; of which about two-thirds of deaths occur in the first month of life. Almost 98% of neonatal deaths due to this infection occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) This is because in resource-limited settings, newborns with signs of PSBI do not receive the recommended inpatient treatment due to limited accessibility, low acceptability or affordability problems resulting in unnecessary infection-related newborn deaths [2]. In Ethiopia, this community-based intervention for newborns with PSBI was started between 2008 and 2013, as a pilot to evaluate the impact of a regimen of intramuscular gentamicin and oral amoxicillin, given by health extension workers (HEWs) to newborns and young infants with signs of PSBI when referral is not possible [11] and was launched on March 2013 It is being implemented as one communitybased newborn care (CBNC) package and high impact newborn and child survival intervention [12]. This study was aimed in exploring community member’s perception, experiences and health seeking behavior towards newborn illnesses

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