Communities’ Perception, Knowledge, and Practices Related to Human African Trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Disease
1.2. Local Communities’ Knowledge of and Behaviors towards HAT
1.3. The Socio-Ecological Model for Analysing Factors Contributing to HAT Health Behaviors
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Analysis
2.2. Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. Communities’ Knowledge about and Perceptions of HAT
3.1.1. The Disease
‘The disease has been around since our ancestors’ time. According to our history, our ancestors were affected by sleeping sickness because they used to sleep all the time’ Focus group with men in Kwilu
Question: Since when did you know that sleeping sickness exist?
Answer: We know that this disease exists since our ancestor’s time and from nurses who work for FOMETRO» Focus group with men in Kasaï Central
‘The sleeping sickness I suffered from was caused by a bad spell from my husband’s other wife who wanted him to divorce me.’Former HAT patient, Lomami
‘It is a disease that spares no one, men or women, children or old people, everyone can be affected by sleeping sickness.’ Local leader, Central Kasai
Question: Why do you think men are more likely to be stung?
Answer: It is because they work in the forest. Especially in the morning the tsetse fly bites the men in the forest and at the river where we work. Focus group with men, Kasai Central
‘We see that here it is the women who suffer more from sleeping sickness than the men. Because women go to the fields every time, this fact makes them more vulnerable; they go fishing where there is a strong presence of tsetse flies.’ Focus group with women, Kwilu
‘Someone can have earlier symptoms of sleeping sickness without knowing about it. He/she can be taken to the hospital or to the health center where they can start treating malaria, while the disease is getting worse until when the person starts to show signs of mental disturbance.’ Focus group with women, Lomami
Question: When someone has fever and headaches can it be caused by trypanosomiasis?
Answer: No, it can be malaria. But if in addition to those symptoms, the person is having abnormal sleeping patterns, then we can say that it is trypanosomiasis. Participatory workshop with women, Mai-Ndombe
‘There was a boy who came from B…, he was also showing the symptoms you are talking about [change in sleeping patterns and unsocial behaviors], we thought this was not normal. He was taken to the hospital, and they found he was suffering from sleeping sickness. But for other people those symptoms are not necessarily caused by sleeping sickness, for instance women who want to control their husband through witchcraft, or men who do witchcraft to find a job, they can also get mental disturbance.’ Focus group with women, Kasaï
‘Since I have been living here sleeping sickness has always been present. I know this because FOMETRO come here every 3 months to screen.’ Church leader, key informant, Kwilu
‘They [mobile team] extract a liquid from your back with a syringe. This process can destroy families, especially for men as they can become impotent.’ Focus group with Men, Lomami
‘There are people who refused to be screened because the procedure is painful, especially the injection in the spinal cord’ Focus group with adolescent girls, Kwilu
‘Everything starts with going to the local health center because at that point you don’t know what you are suffering from. But when the nurse does a test and finds out that you are actually suffering from sleeping sickness, he will transfer you to the Ngandajika [Main hospital]’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘It is impossible to cure this disease with traditional medicine, so to recover from it one needs to be treated with modern medicine’ Focus group with women, Kasai
‘Some people don’t want to go to the health centers to get treatment. They usually say they may get an injection which will cause disability…’ Focus group with men, Kwilu
‘People die because they were diagnosed late. They will also die if their disease was caused by witchcraft. In that case, no matter what medical staff does, they will die’ Focus group with adolescent girls, Kwilu
‘The prohibitions must be followed even now; they will never end. The prohibitions do not change with the evolution of the treatment’ Focus group with men, Kasai Oriental
‘But now there is no longer an injection, you can be treated with a pill, there are no longer many prohibitions…’Focus group with men, Kwilu
‘There used to be a woman who was living not far from here, she had sleeping sickness and was scared to talk about it. But one day she came to see me with her relatives to ask me about the symptoms of this disease. I told them about headaches, fever, …. Then I told them that they should not be afraid because those who treated me will do the same for her.’ Life story with a former HAT patient, Kasaï Central
Question: Since you were born, have you ever heard about the sleeping sickness?
Answer: No, we have never heard about this disease. We only know about tetanus.
Question: There are sometimes people who come in your village with big vehicles, they put tables and boxes outside. What do they talk about?
Answer: We thought that they were examining people looking for tetanus, they were working under the mango trees Focus group with children 9–10 years old, Kasaï
3.1.2. Participation in HAT Control Activities
‘There is a decrease in the number of people who participate in [screening]. There is negligence. I usually condemn this negligence because there can be unknown cases.’ Key informant, community leader, Kasai
‘There are people who refuse to be tested saying that the treatment is very painful, especially the injection in the back.’ Focus group with adolescent girls, Kwilu
‘I suffered from this disease [sleeping sickness] in my childhood, it was when white people were around, I was treated, and I recovered. But when the mobile team came again in 2003 or 2004, I was screened, and the diagnosis was positive. I did undergo treatment again.’ Former HAT patient, Kasaï
‘When we see someone who is saying things that don’t make sense, or who has behavior problems, it is difficult to immediately think that the situation is caused by sleeping sickness, especially in a context where there are no cases of this disease like here in our community. In such situations, we would think first about witchcraft or demons, which will make people seek a solution within the extended family, in churches or from a traditional healer. It is only when these options are exhausted that we can decide to take the patient to the health center.’ Focus group with men, Kasaï Oriental
“We place mini screens along the river to catch tsetse flies, but people say that we placed them to capture evil spirits that will decrease the number of fish in the river.” Key informant, HAT stakeholder, Kwilu
3.1.3. Communities’ Role in HAT Control
Question: Could there be a role for the community members in HAT control activities?
Answer: Yes. As you have just said, there is a lot of vegetation in the neighborhood, it looks like a forest. Community members need to weed and keep the neighborhood clean. This is the work that the community should do. Key Informant, Church Leader, Kwilu
Question: Do you have any recommendations for health professionals regarding HAT treatment?
Answer: No there are no recommendations. It is them [health professionals] who are well placed to know what they should be doing. What recommendation can we give them? Life story, former patient, Lomami
‘They [community] don’t have a role to play [in the sensitization activities], on the contrary, they need to be sensitized.’ Key informant, health provider, Kasaï
‘There was a local dignitary who complained, saying “I have been asking community members to do sensitizations”, while those who ask them to do that job are paid, and have a lot of money. They are asking us to work for free. They should also provide us with an incentive.’ Key informant, local leader, Kasaï
3.2. Using an Ecological Model to Understand Enabling and Limiting Factors for Positive Health Behavior
3.2.1. Individual Level
‘There used to be a time when many people died from sleeping sickness in our community. Our traditional chief organized a ritual, and a goat was sacrificed to get rid of this disease. Since that ritual, the disease has disappeared from our community. I can confirm that this disease no longer exists here.’ Participatory workshop with women, Lomami
Question: Does sleeping sickness exist in this village?
Answer: It no longer exists; I have never seen a prescription for sleeping sickness medicine. Local pharmacist, Kasaï
‘Sleeping sickness still exists in our community. If they do a proper screening, we are sure that they will find some cases. As you can see, we have many palm trees here [where tsetse flies live].’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘Regarding cases, it is difficult to know because they [mobile teams] have never shown us a list showing the existing cases, and how many are left after their work. This is the only way of knowing whether there is a decrease in the incidence of this disease.’ Focus group with men, Kasaï
‘Most of the people run away, those who attend the screening are very few. Even when they visit schools, people run away, they say that the blood that is taken is used for magical purposes. This is why they don’t like to get screened.’ Life story, adolescent former patient, Kwilu
Question: Why do you think that individuals affected by the disease don’t want to go to the hospital?
Answer: It is because of the inaccurate information that the population receives. There are rumors about mobile teams, that say that some people who go to the hospital end up dying. Focus group with Men, Kwilu
‘I was not feeling well. Especially as I didn’t know which stage my disease had reached. So, I had to gather all my courage to go to the screening’Former HAT patient, Kasaï
‘As I know already about sleeping sickness, I cannot run away [when the mobile team come for screening].’ Adolescent former patient, Kwilu
‘My main concern about the elimination of the disease by 2030, is mainly the loss of collective memory. As time passes, children will grow up who have not experienced this disease. So, there will be a time when negligence can happen, as they will be wondering whether this disease is real, but for their parents who lived when this disease was visible, they remember, that these are disciplined people, and more likely to participate in screening activities.’ Key informant, Ministry of Health
‘We have never heard of young people who have been diagnosed with sleeping sickness, it is mostly adult men and women who are most affected.’ Focus group with adolescent girls, Lomami
‘Men pretend when they are sick, they don’t take it seriously, they continue to do their business as if nothing was wrong. But women are more susceptible to disease, especially because of pregnancies, they visit health centers more often, whereas men can spend up to 10 years without knowing what a health center looks like.’ Focus group with men, Kasaï Oriental
‘Men don’t like to go to the health center. It is already late when they decide to go. By that time, symptoms will be advanced, then it becomes difficult to treat them.’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘In a couple situation, when the husband is sick, his whole family will get mobilized, from the youngest to the oldest, they will demand to know the cause of the disease. The wife will be harassed and accused of witchcraft. But when the wife is sick, she can get the support from her husband only, the extended family will not care. We can say with confidence that, within the extended family, the wife’s diseases don’t weigh the same as the husband’s.’ Focus group with men, Kasaï Oriental
‘For some families, they would think that the wife is guilty, or she is a witch, that is why she will get neglected.’Life story, the husband of a former HAT patient, Lomami
Question: If it were you suffering from the sleeping sickness, do you think that you would have the same experience as your husband?
Answer: The way I know men, he would have said, I have done everything, but you are not recovering. Your family should take you back and take care of you. Life story with the spouse of a former HAT patient, Lomami
‘We love our wives, and when they get sick, we take them to the hospital, if it doesn’t work, we take them to the church and that’s the last step. But if it still doesn’t work, we send them back to their homes, because we can’t continue living with a crazy woman, especially if this illness is a result of an issue within her family.’ Focus Group with men, Kasai
3.2.2. Interpersonal/Community Level
‘Sleeping sickness is treated especially in Ngandajika where there is a hospital and specialized doctors. Because even my parents were always treated in Ngandajika.’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘The treatment is good because there are positive results after I have been treated. When I was sick, I was screened by a team of specialists that came from Kinshasa. As the diagnosis was positive, I underwent treatment, and I recovered.’ Former HAT patient, Kasaï Central
‘When we hear about the mobile teams it makes us wonder whether these people who come to screen us don’t bring other diseases that they inoculate us with?’ Focus group with men, Kasaï Oriental
Question: Why do you say that health professionals from B… are not able to treat the disease?
Answer: Because they don’t have equipment and medicine.
Answer: We have never seen them treating sleeping sickness. Participatory workshop with adolescent girls, Kasaï Oriental
‘Not all people attend screening activities. They give priority to their work in the fields, where they go early morning, and they return only late whereas we must work in the morning’ Key informant, HAT health provider, Kasai Central
‘The most difficult experience while I was suffering from sleeping sickness was the fact that I had to have a period of rest while undergoing treatment. I had children for which I had to pay school fees, and some of them were in the last year of secondary school. Because I did not have any income, it was difficult to handle this situation. At that time, I was thinking more about my children than of the disease, because I was already feeling well. But because of all the prohibitions I had to adhere to for six months like not listening to the radio, no hard labor [I could not do anything]’Former HAT patient, Man, Kwilu
Question: When you were asked to take your husband to get treated to Mbujimayi, who took him there?
Answer: He was taken to Mbujimayi by his family.Life story with the spouse of a former HAT patient, Lomami
‘We have noticed that there are families that take their sick members to diviners, traditional healers, instead of taking them to the hospital.’Key informant, female community leader, Kwilu
‘Those who are suffering from sleeping sickness cannot share about it because other people would make fun of them. They can only talk about it with those who are close to them. You know it is a dangerous disease that can cause death. There is a risk of remaining crazy. It is a disease that you can compare to AIDS.’ Focus group with men, Kasai Oriental
‘When playing with my friends, if I do anything that seems strange, they say that I have never recovered from the disease I suffered from. And if I do something that they don’t like, they say that my behavior is an after-effect of the sleeping disease’ Former HAT patient, adolescent, Kwilu
Question: Why do you think the community doesn’t get involved in HAT control activities?
Answer: It is a leadership issue. Local chiefs may ask people to clear the area to keep it clean, but they don’t do any follow up to ascertain whether the work was done or not. There is no sanction for those who don’t follow the instructions. Focus group with men, Kasaï Oriental
Question: Before suffering from this disease, had you heard about it from somewhere?
Answer: No, except when the teams from FOMETRO came. We were asked to go to get screened. Former patient, Kwilu
3.2.3. Societal Level
‘When you mention sleeping sickness, the first idea that comes to our mind is suffering and death’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘Sleeping sickness is a very dangerous disease, if you are diagnosed with it, you need to go to the hospital where you can receive treatment, and it is free. You need to protect yourself against this disease.’ Life story with a HAT patient, Kwilu
‘When you mention those people who come for screening, what comes to our mind when you mention is fear. We start wondering, are these people going to find that we have this disease.’ Focus group with women, Lomami
‘We believe that there are many people who have sleeping sickness, but most run away and refuse to be tested. Some refuse because they will be laughed at.’ Focus group with men, Kasai Central
Question: Is there any reason for not disclosing the identity of those have a positive diagnosis?
Answer: Because it is a shameful situation. There is a risk of stigmatization. People fear because some families would abandon or neglect the sick person. Focus group with women, Lomami
‘I could no longer menstruate, which meant I could no longer have children. I was very disturbed by that’ Women former patient, Kwilu
‘Sleeping sickness exists here, but not like it used to be, the number of cases has dropped because there is a laboratory that was installed here. This has contributed significantly to the reduction of cases.’ Focus group with women, Kwilu
‘Many cases are still present in the areas that are inaccessible to our mobile teams, and this is an important element to consider. Recently, even in the health zone of Dibanga, 3 or 4 cases were detected in the middle of the city.’ Key informant, Ministry of Health
‘Many people didn’t come to the mass screening; they were afraid, they were thinking that if they find that they have the sleeping sickness, they will get treated, and they will be asked to stay home during the agriculture season, this would stop their agricultural activities.’Focus group with women, Kasaï
‘Another challenge is that people are illiterate. We are having a hard time to make them understand some issues. This requires more time and resources, but currently we have only 2 days planned for our activities per village. Therefore, we have limited time to get a population that is illiterate to understand what we are talking about’ Key informant, Kwilu
‘We want that church leaders, traditional healers, and other private health centers don’t keep patients because of ignorance, they should collaborate with health facilities’ Key informant, health professional, Kasaï Central
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Province | Health Zones | Data Collection Activities | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Focus Group Discussions | Key Informant Interview | Life Story | Participatory Workshop | Observation 1 | ||
Kwilu | Bagata | 3 | 5 | 3 | 1 | Continuous |
Masimanimba | 2 | 4 | 2 | 1 | ||
Bandundu | 3 | 5 | 3 | 1 | ||
Djuma | 3 | 6 | 1 | 1 | ||
Kasai | Bulape | 3 | 2 | 3 | 1 | |
Mushenge | 1 | 5 | 3 | 1 | ||
Maindombe | Kwamouth | 3 | 5 | 4 | 1 | |
Mushie | 3 | 7 | 2 | 1 | ||
Lomami | Ngandajika | 3 | 5 | 2 | 1 | |
Kasai Oriental | Tshilenge | 3 | 5 | 3 | 1 | |
Kasansa | 2 | 4 | 1 | 1 | ||
Mbujimayi | 5 | |||||
Kasai Central | Tshikula | 3 | 4 | 2 | 1 | |
Masuika | 3 | 2 | 1 | |||
Lubunga | 4 | 4 | 4 | 1 | ||
Kananga | 2 | |||||
Kinshasa | 3 | |||||
Total | 39 | 73 | 34 | 13 |
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Kabanga, C.; Valverde Mordt, O.; Mbo, F.; Mbondo, M.; Olela, D.; Etinkum, R.; Nkaji, D.; Mukoso, B.; Mananasi, L. Communities’ Perception, Knowledge, and Practices Related to Human African Trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Diseases 2022, 10, 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases10040069
Kabanga C, Valverde Mordt O, Mbo F, Mbondo M, Olela D, Etinkum R, Nkaji D, Mukoso B, Mananasi L. Communities’ Perception, Knowledge, and Practices Related to Human African Trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Diseases. 2022; 10(4):69. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases10040069
Chicago/Turabian StyleKabanga, Charlie, Olaf Valverde Mordt, Florent Mbo, Medard Mbondo, Donatien Olela, Rinelle Etinkum, Dieudonne Nkaji, Bienvenu Mukoso, and Lubanza Mananasi. 2022. "Communities’ Perception, Knowledge, and Practices Related to Human African Trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo" Diseases 10, no. 4: 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases10040069
APA StyleKabanga, C., Valverde Mordt, O., Mbo, F., Mbondo, M., Olela, D., Etinkum, R., Nkaji, D., Mukoso, B., & Mananasi, L. (2022). Communities’ Perception, Knowledge, and Practices Related to Human African Trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Diseases, 10(4), 69. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases10040069