Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Jun 2023)

Image-Based Awareness Campaign and Community Mobilization in the Control of Schistosomiasis

  • Louise Makau-Barasa,
  • Liya Assefa,
  • Moses O. Aderogba,
  • David Bell,
  • Jacob Solomon,
  • Abubakar Abba,
  • Juliana A-Enegela,
  • James G. Damen,
  • Samuel Popoola,
  • Jan-Carel Diehl,
  • Gleb Vdovine,
  • Temitope Agbana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8060309
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
p. 309

Abstract

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Community awareness and participation in mass screening is critical for schistosomiasis control. This study assessed the impact of sharing anonymized image-based positive test results on the uptake of screening during community mobilization outreach. We conducted an observational study to compare the population response to standard and image-based strategies in 14 communities in Abuja, Nigeria. Six hundred and ninety-one (341 females, 350 males) individuals participated in this study. We analyzed the response ratio, relative increase, and sample collection time. The potential treatment uptake and change in social behavior were determined based on a semi-structured questionnaire. The mean response ratio of the image-based strategy was 89.7% representing a significantly higher ratio than the 27.8%, which was observed under the standard mobilization approach (p ≤ 0.001). The image-based method was associated with 100% of the participants agreeing to provide urine samples, 94% willing to be treated, 89% claiming to have been invited to participate in the study by a friend, and 91% desiring to change a predisposing behavioral habit. These findings indicate that image-based community awareness campaigns may increase the population’s perception about schistosomiasis transmission and treatment. This raises new possibilities for local resource mobilization to expand services in reaching the last mile in schistosomiasis control.

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