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Full-Text Articles in Public Health
Social Norms, Misperceptions, And Mosquito Net Use: A Population‑Based, Cross‑Sectional Study In Rural Uganda, Jessica M. Perkins, Paul J. Krezanoski, Sae Takada, Bernard Kakuhikire, Vincent Batwala, Alexander Tsai, Nicholas A. Christakis, David R. Bangsberg
Social Norms, Misperceptions, And Mosquito Net Use: A Population‑Based, Cross‑Sectional Study In Rural Uganda, Jessica M. Perkins, Paul J. Krezanoski, Sae Takada, Bernard Kakuhikire, Vincent Batwala, Alexander Tsai, Nicholas A. Christakis, David R. Bangsberg
OHSU-PSU School of Public Health Faculty Publications and Presentations
Background: Mosquito net use is an essential part of malaria prevention. Although previous research has shown that many people sleep under a mosquito net in endemic areas, it is unknown whether people underestimate how common it is to sleep under a net every night. Furthermore, perceived social norms about whether most others sleep under a mosquito net every night may contribute to personally sleeping under a net, given decades of research showing that people often mimic others’ behaviours.
Methods: Population-based data were collected from 1669 adults across eight villages in one rural parish in southwestern Uganda. Individuals’ perception about whether …
Geospatial-Temporal, Demographic, And Programmatic Adoption Characteristics Of A Large-Scale Water Filter And Improved Cookstove Intervention In Western Province, Rwanda, Katie Fankhauser, Corey L. Nagel, Christina Barstow, Miles Kirby, Evan A. Thomas
Geospatial-Temporal, Demographic, And Programmatic Adoption Characteristics Of A Large-Scale Water Filter And Improved Cookstove Intervention In Western Province, Rwanda, Katie Fankhauser, Corey L. Nagel, Christina Barstow, Miles Kirby, Evan A. Thomas
OHSU-PSU School of Public Health Faculty Publications and Presentations
Lowering the global disease burden of preventable disease has been addressed in part by the distribution of health products and behavior change campaigns in low-income countries. Realizing a health impact requires adoption by participants, and the topic of program uptake and sustained adoption has been studied extensively, although an ecological context is largely missing from existing work. This study characterizes self-reported and observed adoption of improved cookstoves and point-of-use water filters among nearly 80,000 households in Rwanda using demographic and programmatic variables from implementer surveys and integration of geospatial and temporal data based on differentiated recipient location. The odds of …