Psychosocioprofessional and familial becoming of formers Buruli ulcer patients in Benin.

Autor: Kpadonou TG; Service de rééducation et réadaptation fonctionnelle, CNHU de Cotonou, 04 BP, Cotonou, Benin; Unité de médecine physique et de réadaptation, faculté des sciences de la santé de Cotonou, Cotonou, Benin. Electronic address: toussaint.kpadonou@fss.uac.bj., Alagnidé E, Azanmasso H, Fiossi-Kpadonou E, Hans Moevi AA, Niama D, Houngbédji G
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine [Ann Phys Rehabil Med] 2013 Oct; Vol. 56 (7-8), pp. 515-26. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Aug 16.
DOI: 10.1016/j.rehab.2013.07.785
Abstrakt: Unlabelled: Buruli ulcer (BU), an emerging disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans, causes severe impairments. In literature, no survey has been devoted to the cured patients returned back home.
Objective: To analyze the long-term psychosocial, professional and family repercussions of BU on former patients.
Method: Cross-sectional descriptive and analytic study on 244 formers patients seen at the Screening and Treatment BU Center of Allada from 2005 to 2009 and followed at home from January to July 2010.
Results: On the psychosocial level, 50.8% cured patients attributed the disease to witchcraft (mostly adults and teenagers); 90. 2% did not feel guilty (mostly children), 48.9% of the adults felt diminished, 31.7% are depressed and 19.5% anxious. On professional level, 81.0% of workers had gotten back to work, in the same job for 75.0% of them while 25.0% had changed jobs; 90.1% of children went back school, 29.4% followed a normal schooling but 70% did experience academic delay. On family level, 2.5% of patients were rejected by their families.
Conclusion: After returning home, former UB patients suffered of severe psychosocioprofessional and familial repercussions that suggested an organization of their home monitoring.
(Copyright © 2013. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
Databáze: MEDLINE