SOCIETAL-SPECIFIC FACTORS RELATED TO ADHERENCE TO ROUTINE NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS AMONG PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC ILLNESSES ATTENDING LUWEERO HEALTH CENTER IV.

Authors

  • Irene Nakimera Destiny University College Juba
  • David Serunjogi MRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research Unit

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51168/sjhrafrica.v5i6.788

Keywords:

Non-pharmacologic interventions, Societal factors, Chronic illnesses, Luweero Health Center IV

Abstract

Background:

The study aims to determine societal-specific factors related to adherence to routine non-pharmacologic interventions among patients with chronic illnesses attending Luweero HC IV.

Methodology:

A cross-sectional survey design using questionnaires was adopted to collect data from 326 patients with chronic illnesses visiting Luweero Health Centre IV. This district is located approximately 47 miles from north Kampala.  This center was chosen based on the number of patients having chronic illnesses, attending and receiving services. A simple random sampling technique was used to select patients, and only those who met inclusion criteria were interviewed. Purposive sampling was used to select 5 health professionals in charge of chronic illnesses.

Results:

Out of the 326 patients who participated in the study, adherence to routine non-pharmacologic interventions due to societal-specific factors was lowest (33.3%) amongst patients with cultural beliefs and highest (74.4%), amongst patients who have no cultural beliefs, highest (61.0%) amongst patients who believed that non-pharmacological treatment takes long, unlike amongst patients whose belief is that herbs and traditionalist treat best 36.2%. The lowest among patients whose cultural practices are ritual performances done on patients by traditionalists is 43.2% and the highest amongst patients whose cultural practice is taking herbs is 78.8%.  

Conclusion:

All societal factors at multivariate analysis were found to have an impact on adherence to routine non-pharmacological interventions.

Recommendation:

Non-pharmacologic interventionists to design and institute group visiting mechanisms, especially among patients who are unmarried if routine adherence is to be improved.

Author Biography

David Serunjogi, MRC/UVRI and LSHTM Uganda Research Unit

is a researcher with an interest in contributing to the control of the growing burden of NCD in Africa particularly focusing on designing public health interventions aimed at improving the quality of life among infected people, and delaying the new infections of Diabetes and Hypertension in Africa. His current work is focusing on understanding the challenges that come with transforming the available public health information and evidence into practice among people infected with Diabetes and Hypertension in Africa and designing well-tailored interventions. He has trained in 1). Biomedical Laboratory Technology, and 2). Public Health-Health Promotion from the Faculty of Health Sciences at Uganda Martyrs University, 3). Fundamentals of Implementation Science from the University of Washington, 4). Introduction to Hypertension Research, and 5). Fundamentals of Epidemiology and biostatistics for Hypertension Research from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

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Published

2024-06-01

How to Cite

Nakimera, I. ., & Serunjogi, D. (2024). SOCIETAL-SPECIFIC FACTORS RELATED TO ADHERENCE TO ROUTINE NON-PHARMACOLOGIC INTERVENTIONS AMONG PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC ILLNESSES ATTENDING LUWEERO HEALTH CENTER IV. Student’s Journal of Health Research Africa, 5(6), 7. https://doi.org/10.51168/sjhrafrica.v5i6.788

Issue

Section

Section of Community and Public Health Research

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