Ethnomedical Beliefs, Health Education, and Malaria Eradication in Ethiopia
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Quarterly of Community Health Education
- Vol. 11 (4) , 385-397
- https://doi.org/10.2190/ltmq-y081-ubgf-62tj
Abstract
It has been widely recognized that worldwide efforts to eradicate malaria have generally failed because they were largely based on biotechnological interventions while neglecting the human factor. WHO's Primary Health Care orientation emphasized the importance of situating disease eradication programs within the context of the medical beliefs, values, and needs of the target community. This study presents the results of a survey conducted in a rural Southern Ethiopian community on malaria-related beliefs and practices. The findings show that ethnomedical beliefs prevailed in the causational conceptualization of the disease. The majority of the respondents failed to acknowledge the Anopheline mosquitoes as a potential source of ill-health. This lack of vector awareness is discussed in relation to the need for community health education programs. Various organizational and infrastructural innovations introduced by the 1974 Ethiopian Socialist Revolution could be successfully utilized to disseminate basic medical information concerning the malaria cycle and to raise community participation in eradication programs.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- HEALTHCOM: a communication methodology for health in the Third WorldHealth Education Research, 1990
- Policy: Practical and Research Challenges and Options for Health Education in NigeriaInternational Quarterly of Community Health Education, 1989
- Resurgent malaria and the social sciencesSocial Science & Medicine, 1986
- Malaria in Liberian children and mothers: Biocultural perceptions of illness vs clinical evidence of diseaseSocial Science & Medicine, 1985
- Introduction: Anthropology and disease controlMedical Anthropology, 1983
- Myth, Ritual and the Authority of Elders in an Ethiopian SocietyAfrica, 1976
- Interdigitation of Mystical and Physical Healing in EthiopiaBehavior Science Notes, 1968
- Eradication of Infectious DiseasesScience, 1961