“…This finding was in line with 31.8% in Beirut, Lebanon (Mroueh et al, 2018). But, this study was much lower than 48.7% in Addis Ababa (Mesfin et al, 2017), 75.5% in Jimma (Teklay et al, 2013), and 85.1% in Gondar (Abebaw et al, 2016) studies in Ethiopia, 45.6% in Cameroon (Aminde et al, 2019), 58.2% in Gaborone, Botswana (Rwegerera et al, 2018), 40% in Ibadan (Adisa et al, 2011) and 72.5% in Lagos (Azodo & Omuemu, 2017) studies in Nigeria, 44.7% in Egypt (Nashat Hegazy, 2017), 38.5% in Ghana (Bruce et al, 2015), 47.3% in Gaza, State of Palestine (Almadhoun & Alagha, 2018), 40% in Riyadh (Aloudah et al, 2018) and 68.5% in Jeddah (Alshehri et al, 2020) studies in Saudi Arabia, 39% in Bangalore (Imran & Plathottam, 2017) and 50.9% in Karnataka (Kumar et al, 2021) studies in India, 53.6% in Bangladesh (Mannan et al, 2021), 43.1% in Guangdong Province, China (Zhou et al, 2019), and 49.3% in Cambodia (Nonogaki et al, 2019). The variation observed between this and other studies conducted elsewhere was majorly due to the difference in the operational definitions used, and the sample size across studies.…”