Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia

Background Rabies is an important viral zoonotic disease with high fatality rate and economic losses. The impact of rabies is considerably high in Asia and Africa. The study was designed to assess the community’s rabies knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) and their determinants in Amhara region,...

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Autores principales: Bahiru, A., Molla, W., Yizengaw, L., Mekonnen, S.A., Jemberu, Wudu T.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125528
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author Bahiru, A.
Molla, W.
Yizengaw, L.
Mekonnen, S.A.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
author_browse Bahiru, A.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Mekonnen, S.A.
Molla, W.
Yizengaw, L.
author_facet Bahiru, A.
Molla, W.
Yizengaw, L.
Mekonnen, S.A.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
author_sort Bahiru, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background Rabies is an important viral zoonotic disease with high fatality rate and economic losses. The impact of rabies is considerably high in Asia and Africa. The study was designed to assess the community’s rabies knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) and their determinants in Amhara region, Ethiopia. Methods The study was done based on a questionnaire survey of 899 participants in towns and rural districts of Amhara region. Multistage cluster sampling procedure was used to select participants. Quantitative score was generated for KAP and the scores were dichotomized as adequate and inadequate knowledge, desirable and undesirable attitude, and good and poor practice. Descriptive statics and mixed effect logistic regression considering kebele and villages as a random effect was used to see the association of predictor variables towards adequate knowledge, desirable attitude and good practice. Results About 61%, 72% and 45% of the respondents have adequate knowledge, desirable attitude and good practice scores, respectively. Almost all (99%) of the respondents rightly claimed that rabies is transmitted through bite of dogs. Majority of the participants (76.8%) strongly agree that rabies is an important zoonotic disease that can threaten the lives of humans and animals. Only 8% of the respondents had a practice of washing and rinsing dog bite wounds for the prevention of rabies. Female participants were less likely to have adequate knowledge than males (OR = 0.58, 95% CI = 0.35–0.96). Respondents in urban areas were more likely to have desirable attitude than rural residents (OR = 12.4, CI = 1.38–11.67). Conclusion The study showed that participants have good knowledge and attitude towards rabies but poor rabies prevention and control practices. The community public health education should focus on translation of these good knowledge and favorable attitude into practices that effectively reduces rabies burden.
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spelling CGSpace1255282025-12-08T10:06:44Z Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia Bahiru, A. Molla, W. Yizengaw, L. Mekonnen, S.A. Jemberu, Wudu T. zoonoses rabies Background Rabies is an important viral zoonotic disease with high fatality rate and economic losses. The impact of rabies is considerably high in Asia and Africa. The study was designed to assess the community’s rabies knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) and their determinants in Amhara region, Ethiopia. Methods The study was done based on a questionnaire survey of 899 participants in towns and rural districts of Amhara region. Multistage cluster sampling procedure was used to select participants. Quantitative score was generated for KAP and the scores were dichotomized as adequate and inadequate knowledge, desirable and undesirable attitude, and good and poor practice. Descriptive statics and mixed effect logistic regression considering kebele and villages as a random effect was used to see the association of predictor variables towards adequate knowledge, desirable attitude and good practice. Results About 61%, 72% and 45% of the respondents have adequate knowledge, desirable attitude and good practice scores, respectively. Almost all (99%) of the respondents rightly claimed that rabies is transmitted through bite of dogs. Majority of the participants (76.8%) strongly agree that rabies is an important zoonotic disease that can threaten the lives of humans and animals. Only 8% of the respondents had a practice of washing and rinsing dog bite wounds for the prevention of rabies. Female participants were less likely to have adequate knowledge than males (OR = 0.58, 95% CI = 0.35–0.96). Respondents in urban areas were more likely to have desirable attitude than rural residents (OR = 12.4, CI = 1.38–11.67). Conclusion The study showed that participants have good knowledge and attitude towards rabies but poor rabies prevention and control practices. The community public health education should focus on translation of these good knowledge and favorable attitude into practices that effectively reduces rabies burden. 2022-11 2022-11-18T09:57:17Z 2022-11-18T09:57:17Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125528 en Open Access Elsevier Bahiru, A., Molla, W., Yizengaw, L., Mekonnen, S.A. and Jemberu, W.T. 2022. Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia. Heliyon 8(11): e11366.
spellingShingle zoonoses
rabies
Bahiru, A.
Molla, W.
Yizengaw, L.
Mekonnen, S.A.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title_full Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title_short Knowledge, attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of Amhara region, Ethiopia
title_sort knowledge attitude and practice related to rabies among residents of amhara region ethiopia
topic zoonoses
rabies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125528
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