• Title of article

    Gender aspects and womenʹs participation in the control and management of malaria in central Sudan

  • Author/Authors

    Samira Hamid A/Rahman، نويسنده , , Ahmed A. Mohamedani، نويسنده , , Einas Mubarak Mirgani، نويسنده , , Adil Mahgoub Ibrahim، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    1433
  • To page
    1446
  • Abstract
    This work was designed to study the contribution of women in central Sudan in the control and management of malaria with particular emphasis on gender-related aspects that define womenʹs role and participation. The Blue Nile Health Project (BNHP 1980–1990) was launched in 1980 mainly for control of water associated diseases in central Sudan. The BNHP model was chosen to conduct this work. The study showed that women were actively involved in the implementation of the BNHP strategies as health instructors (murshidat) who constituted 75% of the staff of BNHP unit of health education, as members of village health committees (VHC) where they constituted 40% of the VHC members and also as recipients of the project services. All murshidat were interviewed whereas multistage random sampling for VHC members and recipient women in 40 villages was used to select a sample which was interviewed. The results showed that the murshidat and VHC women members played a major role in the motivation, organization and health education of local communities prior to campaigns of environmental sanitation and vector control. Household commitments and difficulties in communication with the public were the main gender-related factors that contributed negatively to womenʹs activities. Cases of malaria have more considerable socio-economic impact than other common diseases, especially with regard to womenʹs household commitments and work. Recipient women were more concerned with aspects of self protection, management of family cases of malaria and health education programmes. They were less involved in drying mosquito breeding sites and spraying activities of insecticides which had been reluctantly accepted because of allergy and bad odour. Although the majority of women considered antimalarials to be less harmful than effects of malaria itself on pregnancy, they did not realizimage the role of malaria chemoprophylaxis during pregnancy. This needs more health education. The study showed that the BNHP programme was very successful in recruiting women in control and management programmes. Therefore, health planners are urged to persuade the subordinated communities of women in many African countries like Sudan to play a more active role in the health programmes and welfare of their communities.
  • Keywords
    Gender , malaria , Womenיs health , Sudan community health programmes , tropical diseases
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1996
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    598953