Knowledge, attitudes, and practices on hand hygiene among primary school pupils in Yumbe Town Council, Yumbe District

dc.contributor.author Chabo, Brahan Adam
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-02T08:52:51Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-02T08:52:51Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.description A research report submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Bachelor of Environmental health sciences, Makerere University en_US
dc.description.abstract Poor hand hygiene makes hands a major pathway through which fecal-oral diseases are transmitted among children [1]. Conferring to Global Public-Private Partnership for Hand washing (GPPHW), 80% of the world’s communicable diseases are transmitted by a mere touch of unhygienic hands In Uganda, diarrhea remains among the five leading causes of under-five mortality, accounting for 8% of the 85,000 under five children mortality and a national prevalence of 20% among children under 5 years [33]. Despite the improvement in the hand washing coverage during Covid period up to 70 percent. there has be a drastic reduction on hand hygiene as reported in the annual DHO report for FY 2021/2022 which puts the latrines coverage at 77.3 percent and hand hygiene at 17 percent in Yumbe District [71]. The aim was to assess the knowledge, attitudes and practices on hand hygiene among pupils in primary schools in Yumbe Town Council, Yumbe District. There were more males 167 (52.2%) and female’s 153 (47.8%) pupils belonging to age group of 11-17 years. A great proportion of pupils 314 (98.74%) were in school and majority 256 (80.50%) had their parents working. Most of the pupils were Christians 230 (72.78%) and the rest 86 (27.22%) were Muslims. A high proportion of the pupils (98.1%) knew that faeces contain germs and most of them 306(95.6%) use soap and water to wash their hands as pupils 301 (94.1%) knew that hand washing prevents diarrheal diseases. Most of the pupils had positive attitude 244 (76.1%) towards hand washing with 239 (75.15%) believing that dirty hands contaminate food and drinking water, while 264 (82.5%) pupils agreed that hand washing prevents cross-contamination of germs. To increase on the level of knowledge on hand washing, Radio (76.6%) was the most mentioned media source used by children to enhance their knowledge on hand washing. This was also revealed in a study conducted in Ethiopia where children used radio to get knowledge on hand washing[78]. This can be due to the urban location of the schools and Yumbe town council being crippled with power outage. Majority of the pupils 298 (93.10%) agreed that hand lavation was important and more than half 303 (94.70%) agreed that washing hands with soap before eating was important. Notably of the pupils sampled 315 (98.4%) agreed that it was important to teach children hand washing practice. A finding of the level of knowledge, attitude and practices on hand washing among pupil led to the assumption that pupil in the study area have adequate knowledge about hand washing. en_US
dc.identifier.citation Chabo, B.A. (2023). Knowledge, attitudes, and practices on hand hygiene among primary school pupils in Yumbe Town Council, Yumbe District. (Unpublished undergraduate dissertation). Makarere Universty, Kampala, Uganda en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12281/18014
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Makerere University en_US
dc.subject Hand hygiene en_US
dc.subject Primary school pupils en_US
dc.subject Yumbe District en_US
dc.subject Faecal-oral diseases en_US
dc.title Knowledge, attitudes, and practices on hand hygiene among primary school pupils in Yumbe Town Council, Yumbe District en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
Files