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Mothers' management of childhood diseases in Yorubaland: the influence of cultural beliefs.
Health Transit Rev. 1997 Oct; 7(2):221-34.HT

Abstract

Several studies have noted that, besides inadequate availability of health care services in many areas, especially the less developed countries, certain disease-specific and non-disease-specific cultural beliefs may influence people's health seeking behaviour. It has even been noted that health services may be underutilized and several health and child care instructions may be ineffective or ignored in traditional and transitional societies where people's ideas and behavioural patterns conflict with the knowledge being passed to them (Feyisetan and Adeokun 1992; Feyisetan 1992). Feyisetan and Adeokun (1992) argued that non-adoption of modern preventive and curative measures cannot be attributed to poverty alone since the costs of some preventive and curative measures are not exorbitant in several of these societies. Rather, they suggested that the gap between awareness of modern health measures and health seeking behaviour must be sought in the social and cultural determinants of behaviour in such matters as child care and disease management. Earlier studies have noted that children in Nigeria die mainly from malaria, diarrhoea, measles, neonatal tetanus, whooping cough, tuberculosis, and bronchopneumonia (Morley and MacWilliam 1961; Ogunlesi 1961; Morley, Woodland and Martin 1963, 1966; Baxter-Grillo and Leshi 1964; Animashaun 1977; Tomkins 1981). Because these diseases are preventable at low cost to the individual, there is a need to investigate why large percentages of children are still subjected to many episodes of these diseases. In this paper, we examine (1) the mothers' perceptions of the aetiology of the three most cited childhood diseases in our study areas, measles, diarrhoea and fever, and the effect of these perceptions on the mothers' suggested curative measures; and (2) the persistence of the belief in abiku and how this cultural belief can influence mothers' management of childhood diseases. Since, for most mothers, perceptions of the aetiology of the childhood diseases are rooted in cultural beliefs, a brief review of disease-specific cultural beliefs is undertaken. In order to determine the effect of socio-economic factors, the mothers' perceptions of the aetiology of the childhood diseases, their recommended curative measures and the belief in abiku are examined according to selected socio-economic variables.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Demography and Social Statistics, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10176379

Citation

Feyisetan, B J., et al. "Mothers' Management of Childhood Diseases in Yorubaland: the Influence of Cultural Beliefs." Health Transition Review : the Cultural, Social, and Behavioural Determinants of Health, vol. 7, no. 2, 1997, pp. 221-34.
Feyisetan BJ, Asa S, Ebigbola JA. Mothers' management of childhood diseases in Yorubaland: the influence of cultural beliefs. Health Transit Rev. 1997;7(2):221-34.
Feyisetan, B. J., Asa, S., & Ebigbola, J. A. (1997). Mothers' management of childhood diseases in Yorubaland: the influence of cultural beliefs. Health Transition Review : the Cultural, Social, and Behavioural Determinants of Health, 7(2), 221-34.
Feyisetan BJ, Asa S, Ebigbola JA. Mothers' Management of Childhood Diseases in Yorubaland: the Influence of Cultural Beliefs. Health Transit Rev. 1997;7(2):221-34. PubMed PMID: 10176379.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Mothers' management of childhood diseases in Yorubaland: the influence of cultural beliefs. AU - Feyisetan,B J, AU - Asa,S, AU - Ebigbola,J A, PY - 1997/9/4/pubmed PY - 1997/9/4/medline PY - 1997/9/4/entrez KW - Africa KW - Africa South Of The Sahara KW - Age Factors KW - Behavior KW - Beliefs--women KW - Child KW - Child Care KW - Child Rearing KW - Child Survival KW - Culture KW - Delivery Of Health Care KW - Demographic Factors KW - Developing Countries KW - Diarrhea--etiology KW - Diseases KW - English Speaking Africa KW - Family And Household KW - Family Characteristics KW - Family Relationships KW - Health KW - Length Of Life KW - Measles--etiology KW - Morbidity KW - Mortality KW - Mothers KW - Nigeria KW - Parents KW - Population KW - Population Characteristics KW - Population Dynamics KW - Research Methodology KW - Sampling Studies KW - Studies KW - Surveys KW - Survivorship KW - Viral Diseases KW - Western Africa KW - Youth SP - 221 EP - 34 JF - Health transition review : the cultural, social, and behavioural determinants of health JO - Health Transit Rev VL - 7 IS - 2 N2 - Several studies have noted that, besides inadequate availability of health care services in many areas, especially the less developed countries, certain disease-specific and non-disease-specific cultural beliefs may influence people's health seeking behaviour. It has even been noted that health services may be underutilized and several health and child care instructions may be ineffective or ignored in traditional and transitional societies where people's ideas and behavioural patterns conflict with the knowledge being passed to them (Feyisetan and Adeokun 1992; Feyisetan 1992). Feyisetan and Adeokun (1992) argued that non-adoption of modern preventive and curative measures cannot be attributed to poverty alone since the costs of some preventive and curative measures are not exorbitant in several of these societies. Rather, they suggested that the gap between awareness of modern health measures and health seeking behaviour must be sought in the social and cultural determinants of behaviour in such matters as child care and disease management. Earlier studies have noted that children in Nigeria die mainly from malaria, diarrhoea, measles, neonatal tetanus, whooping cough, tuberculosis, and bronchopneumonia (Morley and MacWilliam 1961; Ogunlesi 1961; Morley, Woodland and Martin 1963, 1966; Baxter-Grillo and Leshi 1964; Animashaun 1977; Tomkins 1981). Because these diseases are preventable at low cost to the individual, there is a need to investigate why large percentages of children are still subjected to many episodes of these diseases. In this paper, we examine (1) the mothers' perceptions of the aetiology of the three most cited childhood diseases in our study areas, measles, diarrhoea and fever, and the effect of these perceptions on the mothers' suggested curative measures; and (2) the persistence of the belief in abiku and how this cultural belief can influence mothers' management of childhood diseases. Since, for most mothers, perceptions of the aetiology of the childhood diseases are rooted in cultural beliefs, a brief review of disease-specific cultural beliefs is undertaken. In order to determine the effect of socio-economic factors, the mothers' perceptions of the aetiology of the childhood diseases, their recommended curative measures and the belief in abiku are examined according to selected socio-economic variables. SN - 1036-4005 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10176379/Mothers'_management_of_childhood_diseases_in_Yorubaland:_the_influence_of_cultural_beliefs_ L2 - https://medlineplus.gov/measles.html DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -