Gender Roles and Perceptions of Malaria Risk in Agricultural Communities of Mwea Division in Central Kenya.
Autor: | Woldu, Dawit Okubatsion, Haile, Zelalem Teka |
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Předmět: |
RISK of malaria
WORK environment EDUCATIONAL attainment AGRICULTURAL laborers ATTITUDE (Psychology) CHI-squared test CONFIDENCE intervals DISEASES FOCUS groups GOODNESS-of-fit tests IMMUNE system INTERVIEWING LONGITUDINAL method MALARIA RESEARCH methodology PARTICIPANT observation PROBABILITY theory RESEARCH RESEARCH funding SEX distribution GENDER role WOMEN'S health HOUSEKEEPING QUALITATIVE research CULTURAL values MULTIPLE regression analysis QUANTITATIVE research SOCIOECONOMIC factors CROSS-sectional method DATA analysis software DESCRIPTIVE statistics ODDS ratio |
Zdroj: | Women & Health; Feb-Mar2015, Vol. 55 Issue 2, p227-243, 17p |
Abstrakt: | We examined gender differences in the perception of high malaria risk in women and factors associated with a high number of malaria episodes in the Mwea Division of Central Kenya. Ethnographic and successive free listing interviews (an open-ended data collection technique used to show the relation of items in a given domain) with 53 key informants and structured interviews conducted from June to October 2010 with 250 respondents who represented the socioeconomic and geographical diversity of the area were analyzed. Qualitative text analysis and inferential statistics were employed. While a greater proportion of men (51.6%) attributed women’s high malaria risk to their “biological weakness,” most women believed that their high malaria risk was related to their role in the agricultural fields (43.6%) and to their household responsibilities (23.1%). Compared to men, women were more likely to work in wet aspects of agricultural activities (χ2(2,N= 153) = 13.47,p< .01). Women were nearly twice as likely as men to report high episodes of malaria (adjusted odds ratio: 2.54; 95% confidence interval: 1.05–6.15). Culturally prescribed gender roles in agricultural communities in Mwea may play an important role in explaining disparity in reported malaria incidence. While identification of ecological and economic determinants of malaria is important, gender-based research can make a significant contribution to the development of effective and sustainable malaria reduction strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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