Abstract

BackgroundCholera mainly affects developing countries where safe water supply and sanitation infrastructure are often rudimentary. Sub-Saharan Africa is a cholera hotspot. Effective cholera control requires not only a professional assessment, but also consideration of community-based priorities. The present work compares local sociocultural features of endemic cholera in urban and rural sites from three field studies in southeastern Democratic Republic of Congo (SE-DRC), western Kenya and Zanzibar.MethodsA vignette-based semistructured interview was used in 2008 in Zanzibar to study sociocultural features of cholera-related illness among 356 men and women from urban and rural communities. Similar cross-sectional surveys were performed in western Kenya (n = 379) and in SE-DRC (n = 360) in 2010. Systematic comparison across all settings considered the following domains: illness identification; perceived seriousness, potential fatality and past household episodes; illness-related experience; meaning; knowledge of prevention; help-seeking behavior; and perceived vulnerability.ResultsCholera is well known in all three settings and is understood to have a significant impact on people’s lives. Its social impact was mainly characterized by financial concerns. Problems with unsafe water, sanitation and dirty environments were the most common perceived causes across settings; nonetheless, non-biomedical explanations were widespread in rural areas of SE-DRC and Zanzibar. Safe food and water and vaccines were prioritized for prevention in SE-DRC. Safe water was prioritized in western Kenya along with sanitation and health education. The latter two were also prioritized in Zanzibar. Use of oral rehydration solutions and rehydration was a top priority everywhere; healthcare facilities were universally reported as a primary source of help. Respondents in SE-DRC and Zanzibar reported cholera as affecting almost everybody without differentiating much for gender, age and class. In contrast, in western Kenya, gender differentiation was pronounced, and children and the poor were regarded as most vulnerable to cholera.ConclusionsThis comprehensive review identified common and distinctive features of local understandings of cholera. Classical treatment (that is, rehydration) was highlighted as a priority for control in the three African study settings and is likely to be identified in the region beyond. Findings indicate the value of insight from community studies to guide local program planning for cholera control and elimination.

Highlights

  • Introduction of aHIV vaccine in developing countries: social and cultural dimensions

  • Study sites in western Kenya and Southeastern Democratic Republic of Congo (SE-DRC) were selected in 2010 based on (i) epidemiological data collected from recent cholera outbreaks, (ii) comparability of urban and rural sites with reference to the survey sites in Zanzibar and (iii) considerations regarding the security of the research team (SE-DRC) and accessibility

  • Sample characteristics Approximately equal numbers of men and women from urban and rural sites were interviewed in SE-DRC (n = 360), western Kenya (n = 379) and Zanzibar (n = 356)

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Summary

Introduction

HIV vaccine in developing countries: social and cultural dimensions. Martin S, Costa A, Perea W: Stockpiling oral cholera vaccine. Cholera mainly affects developing countries where safe water supply and sanitation infrastructure are often rudimentary. Cholera is an ancient enteric disease that originated from the Ganges delta [1]. It is caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae that exists in the aquatic environment independent from human hosts [2,3]. V. cholerae produces an enterotoxin, which is the direct cause of acute watery diarrhea in humans. Administration of oral rehydration solutions or infusions is the principal treatment [6]

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