BACKGROUND: In 2022, monsoon rain and flood affected 23 districts in
Sindh, Pakistan displacing six-million-people.
Internally-displaced-persons-(IDPs) were prone to infectious-
disease-outbreaks and acute-respiratory-infection-(ARI). Objectives of
this study were to assess association between
socio-demographic-characteristics, occurrence of ARI and compare
pre-&-post health-education-effects on level of awareness regarding
ARI. METHODS: Comparative cross-sectional-study carried-out in
medical-camps of randomly selected seven-villages of
District-Kharipur-Mirus. The 560 subjects were recruited through
consecutive sampling. Health-education-sessions were taken &
Behavior-Change-Communication tool (BCC) was applied. Epi-info was used
to calculate frequencies, p-value and chi-square test was applied to
determine associations RESULT: 560-patients were treated in
medical-camps with different types of ARI. Among them females were
56%(n=312), ARI-cases were more predominate factor reported in
medical-camps 41%(n=229) besides tonsillitis 25%(n=140),
bronchitis13%(n=72), diarrhea11%(n=62) and severe-pneumonia4%(n=22).
Before health-education-session 94%(n=529) affectees had no knowledge
regarding ARI-prevention. The 57%(n=320) belonged to poor-family. After
post-health-education-sessions 89%(n=499) peoples were sensitized
regarding ARI-prevention methods. Among socio-demographic-variables,
age-group(10-19years), hygiene-status & socioeconomic-status was
strongly statistically associated with occurrence of
upper-acute-respiratory-infection (p=0.01, p=0.04 & p=0.001)
respectively. We didn’t find significant association between
previous-history & occurrence of ARI (p=0.12). There was statistically
significant difference between pre-&-post application of BCC tool on
the level of awareness among IDPs(p=0.03). CONCLUSION: There is great
impact of health-education on cumulatively raising level of awareness
among displaced-population regarding control of infectious-diseases like
ARI. Second decade of age, low socio-economic-status &
bad-hygiene-status was identified as high-risk factors which can be
addressed through health- education & behavior-change-communication.
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