Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia

Background: Dengue has affected more than one-third of the world population and Malaysia has recorded an increase in the number of dengue cases since 2012. Selangor state recorded the highest number of dengue cases in Malaysia. Most of the dengue infections occur among people living in hotspot areas...

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Main Authors: Nurul Akmar Ghani, Shamarina Shohaimi, Alvin Kah-Wei Hee, Hui-Yee Chee, Oguntade Emmanuel, Lamidi Sarumoh Alaba Ajibola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-02-01
Series:Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/4/1/37
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spelling doaj-252b005ec28f4a8ca0e3c5ce81dc45df2020-11-25T02:10:52ZengMDPI AGTropical Medicine and Infectious Disease2414-63662019-02-01413710.3390/tropicalmed4010037tropicalmed4010037Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, MalaysiaNurul Akmar Ghani0Shamarina Shohaimi1Alvin Kah-Wei Hee2Hui-Yee Chee3Oguntade Emmanuel4Lamidi Sarumoh Alaba Ajibola5Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaCentre of Foundation Studies for Agricultural Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaDepartment of Biology, Faculty of Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaDepartment of Medical Microbiology and Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaInstitute for Mathematical Research, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaDepartment of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, MalaysiaBackground: Dengue has affected more than one-third of the world population and Malaysia has recorded an increase in the number of dengue cases since 2012. Selangor state recorded the highest number of dengue cases in Malaysia. Most of the dengue infections occur among people living in hotspot areas of dengue. This study aims to compare Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among communities living in hotspot and non-hotspot dengue areas. Method: Communities living in 20 hotspot and 20 non-hotspot areas in Selangor were chosen in this study where 406 participants were randomly selected to answer questionnaires distributed at their housing areas. Total marks of each categories were compared using <i>t</i>-test. Result: Results show that there were significant mean differences in marks in Knowledge (<i>p</i> value: 0.003; 15.41 vs. 14.55) and Attitude (<i>p</i> value: &lt; 0.001; 11.41 vs. 10.33), but not Practice (<i>p</i> value 0.101; 10.83 vs. 10.47) categories between communities of non-hotspot and hotspot areas. After considering two confounding variables which are education level and household income, different mean marks are found to be significant in Knowledge when education level acts as a covariate and Attitude when both act as covariates. Conclusion: Overall results show that people living in non-hotspot areas had better knowledge and attitude than people living in hotspot areas, but no difference was found in practice. This suggests that public health education should be done more frequently with people with a low education background and low household income, especially in hotspot areas to fight dengue outbreak and make dengue cases decrease effectively.https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/4/1/37dengueknowledge attitude practice (KAP)dengue incidencedengue hotspot
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nurul Akmar Ghani
Shamarina Shohaimi
Alvin Kah-Wei Hee
Hui-Yee Chee
Oguntade Emmanuel
Lamidi Sarumoh Alaba Ajibola
spellingShingle Nurul Akmar Ghani
Shamarina Shohaimi
Alvin Kah-Wei Hee
Hui-Yee Chee
Oguntade Emmanuel
Lamidi Sarumoh Alaba Ajibola
Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
dengue
knowledge attitude practice (KAP)
dengue incidence
dengue hotspot
author_facet Nurul Akmar Ghani
Shamarina Shohaimi
Alvin Kah-Wei Hee
Hui-Yee Chee
Oguntade Emmanuel
Lamidi Sarumoh Alaba Ajibola
author_sort Nurul Akmar Ghani
title Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
title_short Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
title_fullStr Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among Communities Living in Hotspot and Non-Hotspot Areas of Dengue in Selangor, Malaysia
title_sort comparison of knowledge, attitude, and practice among communities living in hotspot and non-hotspot areas of dengue in selangor, malaysia
publisher MDPI AG
series Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
issn 2414-6366
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Background: Dengue has affected more than one-third of the world population and Malaysia has recorded an increase in the number of dengue cases since 2012. Selangor state recorded the highest number of dengue cases in Malaysia. Most of the dengue infections occur among people living in hotspot areas of dengue. This study aims to compare Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice among communities living in hotspot and non-hotspot dengue areas. Method: Communities living in 20 hotspot and 20 non-hotspot areas in Selangor were chosen in this study where 406 participants were randomly selected to answer questionnaires distributed at their housing areas. Total marks of each categories were compared using <i>t</i>-test. Result: Results show that there were significant mean differences in marks in Knowledge (<i>p</i> value: 0.003; 15.41 vs. 14.55) and Attitude (<i>p</i> value: &lt; 0.001; 11.41 vs. 10.33), but not Practice (<i>p</i> value 0.101; 10.83 vs. 10.47) categories between communities of non-hotspot and hotspot areas. After considering two confounding variables which are education level and household income, different mean marks are found to be significant in Knowledge when education level acts as a covariate and Attitude when both act as covariates. Conclusion: Overall results show that people living in non-hotspot areas had better knowledge and attitude than people living in hotspot areas, but no difference was found in practice. This suggests that public health education should be done more frequently with people with a low education background and low household income, especially in hotspot areas to fight dengue outbreak and make dengue cases decrease effectively.
topic dengue
knowledge attitude practice (KAP)
dengue incidence
dengue hotspot
url https://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/4/1/37
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