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“What Do You Know About Zika?”: Investigating Women at a Primary Healthcare Facility in a Small Municipality in Brazil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2019

Elaine Miranda
Affiliation:
Federal Fluminense University, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Claudia Santos-Pinto
Affiliation:
Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul, Campo Grande, Brazil
Clarice Antunes-de-Lima
Affiliation:
Federal Fluminense University, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Claudia Osorio-de-Castro
Affiliation:
National School of Public Health, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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Abstract

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Introduction:

In Brazil, poverty-stricken population groups were the most affected by Zika virus (ZIKV). Women and children are fragile links that need focused attention, especially in relation to health care.

Aim:

To investigate vulnerable, at-risk women in relation to their awareness of the ZIKV infection knowledge about the disease.

Methods:

With evidence-based risk communication literature and consequences of ZIKV infection, a data collection instrument with open-ended questions was developed. Women from a small municipality in west-central Brazil, most from a rural setting, were interviewed at primary health care centers in April 2018. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. A preliminary analysis ensued.

Results:

Forty women were interviewed. The average age was 42.3 (21-74 yrs) and 39 women had at least one child. The average number of people living in the same home was 3.8 (1-18) and 24 homes (60%) had one to four children. Fourteen women (54%) were beneficiaries of income supplementation programs. Two interviewees mentioned they had never heard of Zika and eight (20%) had no actual knowledge to convey. Other groups had some knowledge about ZIKV. Fifteen (37.5%) associated ZIKV with mosquito bites and another 15 with pregnancy or birth defects. Ten women (25%) mentioned dengue or chikungunya, but only 7 (17.5%) were aware of symptoms. Only eleven women (27.5%) declared public health workers as information sources.

Discussion:

Positive aspects of awareness and knowledge were the tentative relationship some women made between pregnancy risk and exposure to mosquitoes, and with dengue or chikungunya. However, given ample media coverage and the severity of the epidemic, it is noteworthy to point out that all aspects were mentioned by fewer than half of the women. Health workers were not represented as relevant sources of information. Future in-depth content analysis of interviews may reveal important issues for risk communication strategies for this population.

Type
Latin America and Caribbean Chapter
Copyright
© World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2019