Malaria preventive behaviors among housewives in suburbs of Bandar-Abbas City, south of Iran: interventional design based on PRECEDE model.
Leila GhahremaniMojdeh AziziMohammad Djaefar Moemenbellah-FardHaleh GhaemPublished in: Pathogens and global health (2019)
Suburban areas suffer from unfavorable conditions as a result of poor health standards, low income, illness, and slight levels of education. One of the most important components in malaria elimination programs is health education. Bandar-Abbas is a malaria endemic city. Therefore, this study aimed to promote malaria preventive behaviors among housewives in suburbs of Bandar-Abbas City, Iran, through a PRECEDE model-based intervention program. This quasi-experimental study was carried out on 172 housewives under the coverage of four healthcare centers in Bandar-Abbas in 2016. The participants were randomly divided into two experimental and control groups, based on the inclusion criteria. The data collection tools included ademographic questionnaire, aresearcher-made questionnaire based on the educational phase of the PRECEDE model and achecklist for assessing malaria preventive behaviors. After the pre-test, the educational intervention was implemented on the intervention group at the first stage and the same questionnaire was administered as the post-test for both groups two months after the intervention. In this study, after implementing the intervention using the PRECEDE educational program, asignificant difference was found between the intervention and control groups in the mean scores for predisposing factors (knowledge and attitude) (P< 0.001), enabling factors (P< 0.001) and reinforcing factors (P< 0.001), which contributed to the improvement of preventive behaviors (P< 0.001). The PRECEDE model-based health education was effective in increasing knowledge and attitude, enabling and reinforcing factors, and promoting malaria preventive behaviors in the studied endemic areas.