We interviewed caretakers of 1,043 children < 5 years old in a baseline cross-sectional survey (April to May 2007) and > 20,000 children on five separate subsequent occasions (May of 2009 to December 31, 2010) to assess healthcare seeking patterns for diarrhea. Diarrhea prevalence during the preceding 2 weeks ranged from 26% at baseline to 4–11% during 2009–2010. Caretakers were less likely to seek healthcare outside the home for infants (versus older children) with diarrhea (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.33, confidence interval [CI] = 0.12–0.87). Caretakers of children with reduced food intake (aOR = 3.42, CI = 1.37–8.53) and sunken eyes during their diarrheal episode were more likely to seek care outside home (aOR = 4.76, CI = 1.13–8.89). Caretakers with formal education were more likely to provide oral rehydration solution (aOR = 3.01, CI = 1.41–6.42) and visit a healthcare facility (aOR = 3.32, CI = 1.56–7.07). Studies calculating diarrheal incidence and healthcare seeking should account for seasonal trends. Improving caretakers' knowledge of home management could prevent severe diarrhea.
Disclaimer: The findings and conclusions in this report are the findings and conclusions of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Diarrhea causes an estimated 1.87 million deaths among children < 5 years old annually, representing ∼19% of all child deaths
The KEMRI/CDC began implementing the HDSS in western Kenya in 2001.
Location of the Asembo and Gem HDSS areas in western Kenya. The stars located in Asembo and Gem designate the locations of the GEMS sentinel health facilities.
A resident of the HDSS area was defined as a person who has lived in the HDSS area for at least 4 consecutive months or a newborn child of such a person.
Diarrhea was defined as more than or equal to three loose stools within the previous 24 hours.
MSD was defined as diarrhea with one or more of the following characteristics: sunken eyes, loss of skin turgor, dysentery (blood in stool), receipt of intravenous rehydration, or required hospitalization.
Less severe diarrhea (LSD) was defined as diarrhea with absence of any characteristic of MSD (above).
Other definitions for this study have been detailed elsewhere.
The sample size considerations for the HUAS have been described elsewhere.
The HUAS-lite aimed at enrolling the entire population of caretakers of children < 5 years old registered as residents in the HDSS area during every round (
From a sampling frame of ∼20,853 children < 5 years old registered in HDSS at the time of the survey, we sought to complete interviews with a minimum of 333 caretakers of children in each of three age strata: 0–11, 12–23, and 24–59 months old.
In total, 1,425 children were randomly selected to participate in the HUAS. To ensure that sufficient numbers of neonates < 1 month and children 1–4 months were represented, using the most updated census data collected through the HDSS, we supplemented the sample with a list of 100 pregnant mothers (collected from HDSS data from the most recent round; i.e., January to April of 2007) and 130 randomly selected children 1–4 months old from the most recently completed HDSS census round (January to April of 2007). All other children were randomly selected from the previous census round (September to December of 2006), including 230 children 5–11 months old, 370 children 12–23 months old, and 370 children 24–59 months old. To account for an estimated 20% loss in enrollment because of outmigration, death, and children being over age, we randomly selected an additional 75 children per age stratum. Among 1,425 children randomly selected, 553 children were ages 0–11 months (125 neonates, 155 1- to 4-month old children, and 255 5- to 11-month-old children), 445 children were ages 12–23 months, and 445 children were ages 24–59 months. Children who had moved from their residence, could not be traced, died, or were over age were replaced with a child in the appropriate age group. There was no replacement of children who had traveled (but still resided within the HDSS), refused to participate, or were not available after three attempts were made to contact their caretakers. In total, 1,298 caretakers were approached for interview (
(
The KEMRI/CDC HDSS collects census and surveillance data through house-to-house interviews by trained staff on a regular basis through three rounds in each calendar year (January to April, May to August, and September to December).
The baseline survey was carried out from April 25 to May 9, 2007 (the HUAS study period). Trained community interviewers located the households and interviewed the primary caretakers of the randomly selected children. Reinterviews were carried out in 10% of households.
After obtaining caretaker's written consent, community interviewers administered to the caretakers of all selected children a pre-tested questionnaire written in English and translated into the local dialect (Dholuo). Through 65 questions (administered over 30 minutes if the child had diarrhea), we collected information on demographics, child morbidity, parents' perception of illness and use of healthcare facilities, diarrhea history during the past 2 weeks (including signs and symptoms), home and health facility management of the child's diarrheal illness (including use of ORS), healthcare use, healthcare expenses, attitudes to healthcare and diarrhea, and hypothetical use of enteric vaccines should they become available. For children without diarrhea, the HUAS survey took, on average, 10 minutes.
The HUAS-lite used a condensed version of the HUAS questionnaire with 21 questions; the child's primary caretaker was interviewed about information on demographics, the child's diarrhea history, and healthcare use. The first two questions screened caretakers to determine if that person was the child's primary caretaker and if the child had an illness with diarrhea during the last 14 days. If the child had diarrhea, then the additional HUAS-lite questions were asked; if not, the HUAS-lite interview was complete. For children with diarrhea, the HUAS-lite survey took, on average, 10 minutes to administer.
Data were recorded on optical character recognition-enabled forms. After manual accuracy checks, the forms were electronically transmitted from KEMRI/CDC to the GEMS Data Coordinating Center (DCC) at the Perry Point Veterans Administration Hospital in Maryland, where data were captured by DataFax software (Clinical DataFax Systems Inc., Ontario, Canada). Cleaned data were exported to an SAS dataset (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).
The HUAS-lite survey form was developed and deployed to a handheld device (Personal Digital Assistant [PDA]; HTC Advantage X7500, HTC Corporation, Taoyuan City, Taiwan) running on Windows mobile 6.5 platform. The HUAS-lite questionnaire was developed and deployed to the PDA using Visual Studio.net 2005 and Microsoft SQL server 2005. For data quality, validation rules were programmed to avoid inconsistent or out of range values; repeat interviews were conducted in 3% of compounds per village, and supervisory oversight was conducted on at least 2% of weekly interviews. Weekly data were downloaded in the field to programmed netbooks, from which data inconsistency checks were undertaken. Data cleaning was performed using SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC) on download at the KEMRI/CDC HDSS data section. Data were transmitted weekly to DCC through a web-based secure file transfer protocol server, where additional data cleaning and data validation were completed. Databases for each of the five HUAS-lite surveys were exported to SAS datasets.
We used χ2 tests to examine the association between the characteristics of the child and the caretakers' knowledge, attitude, and health-seeking behavior (predictor factors) and any diarrhea, seeking care outside the home, use of ORS at home, and seeking care from a health facility (outcomes of interest). For all statistical tests, a two-sided
Logistic regression was used to model separately for each outcome to evaluate the effect of specific variables and control for confounding. Variables with
For each survey, we estimated the 2-week period prevalence of any diarrhea, MSD, proportion of the diarrhea group seeking care outside the home, and proportion of the MSD group seeking care outside the home to one of the designated GEMS case-control study sentinel health facilities. Proportions and 95% CIs were calculated, controlling for correlation at the compound level, because more than one child may have been surveyed from the same compound. The Cochran–Armitage test for trend was used to examine differences across rounds.
For the HUAS, written informed consent was obtained in the local dialect from all participating caretakers before interview. For the HUAS-lite, verbal consent was sought as consent for data collection, because data collection elements for the HUAS-lite were already approved under the existing HDSS protocol (KEMRI Protocol #1801/CDC Protocol #3308).
The study protocols for the HUAS and HUAS-lite were reviewed and approved by the Scientific and Ethical Review Committees of the KEMRI (KEMRI Protocol #1155) and The Institutional Review Board (IRB) of the University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD (UMD Protocol #H-28327). The IRB for the CDC, Atlanta, GA, deferred its review to the UMD IRB (CDC Protocol #5038).
Based on the weighted analysis, the estimated prevalence of any diarrheal episode during the past 2 weeks at baseline was 22.3% (CI = 19.5–25.0) among 20,853 children living in the HDSS area at the time of the HUAS survey.
The prevalence of reported diarrhea in the past 2 weeks among children < 5 years old in the HDSS ranged from the highest rate of 10.8% (May 22 to August 31, 2009) to the lowest rate of 3.9% (September 14 to December 31, 2010) (
Prevalence of MSD and LSD in the last 2 weeks among children < 5 years old by the HUAS-lite round from May 22, 2009 to December 31, 2010, in western Kenya.
During the baseline HUAS, we successfully interviewed caretakers of 1,043 children 0–59 months of age; 275 (26%) children were reported to have had diarrhea during the 2 weeks preceding the interview (
We used data on household asset ownership to rank household wealth from poorest to wealthiest using five quintiles. Overall, 34.3% of 1,043 respondents surveyed lived in households within the two lowest wealth quintiles; the highest proportion of children with diarrhea (33%) fell within the poorest wealth quintile (
Wealth quintile ranking of caretakers of children < 5 years old participating in the HUAS in western Kenya in 2007.
We asked caretakers what they would look for to determine if a child is dehydrated; 716 (68.6%) caretakers indicated that they would look for lethargy, 481 (46.1%) caretakers answered sunken eyes, 369 (35.4%) caretakers answered wrinkled skin, 297 (28.5%) caretakers answered dry mouth, and 297 (28.5%) caretakers answered thirst. In total, 206 (19.8%) caretakers said that they would look for both thirst and dry mouth to see if a child is dehydrated.
According to caretakers, the majority (86.2%) of 275 children who had an episode of any diarrhea in the preceding 2 weeks had three to six loose stools per day. Reported accompanying symptoms included lethargy (
We asked caretakers what they offered their child to drink and eat during the child's diarrheal illness. Of 275 children with diarrhea, 41 (15%) caretakers said they offered the child more drink than usual, 51 (19%) caretakers reported offering the child the same amount, and 183 (67%) caretakers reported that they offered less than usual to drink during the child's diarrheal episode. Of those caretakers who offered less than usual, 96 (52%) children were offered somewhat less, 69 (38%) children were offered much less, and 18 (10%) children were offered nothing to drink during their diarrheal illness. Of 269 caretakers who reported what they offered their child to eat during their diarrheal episode, 3 (1%) caretakers offered more than usual, 43 (16%) caretakers offered the usual amount, and 223 (83%) caretakers stated that they offered less than usual to eat. Of those caretakers who offered less than usual, 74 (33%) caretakers offered somewhat less, 67 (30%) caretakers offered much less, and 82 (37%) caretakers offered nothing during the diarrheal illness. According to their caretakers, 66 (37%) of 180 and 77 (35%) of 220 children who were offered less than usual to drink and eat, respectively, had vomiting accompanying their diarrheal illness.
Healthcare was sought outside the home for 214 (77.8%) of 275 children with diarrhea. For any episode of diarrhea, the places visited as the first source of healthcare outside the home included licensed (62%) and unlicensed (11%) providers and pharmacies (27%). Seeking care outside the home was similar among caretakers of children with bloody compared with non-bloody diarrhea (27 [79%] of 34 versus 187 [78%] of 241,
The most common means of transportation to the nearest health facility of choice was walking (74%) followed by commercial transportation (which included riding on the back of a bicycle; 13%) and personal transport (generally a bicycle; 4%).
We asked caretakers how long it would usually take to reach the health facility of choice; 770 (74%) of 1,035 respondents estimated that it would usually take less than 1 hour. The main circumstances that make it difficult for caretakers to reach their nearest health facility of choice were that it cost too much money (49%) followed by heavy rainfall or flooding (45%) and lack of transportation (24%).
We asked caretakers about who makes the decision to take the child to a health facility when sick; 809 (78%) of 1,041 respondents said that the child's mother makes the decision, whereas 232 (22%) said other relatives, including the child's father, make this decision. We asked all 1,043 caretakers who participated in this survey if they think that vaccines are important to their child's health; 99% said they think that vaccines are important.
The weighted multivariate analysis of risk factors for any diarrheal illness showed that children ages < 12 months (30.5%, aOR = 2.19, CI = 1.50–3.21) and 12–23 months (31.4%, aOR = 2.24, CI = 1.53–3.30) compared with children ages 24–59 months (16.2%) were at increased risk of having an episode of diarrhea (regardless of severity) during the 2 weeks preceding the survey (
On weighted multivariate analysis, seeking healthcare outside the home for diarrheal illness was less common for infants than children ages 24–59 months (aOR = 0.33, CI = 0.12–0.87) (
On weighted multivariate analysis, seeking care from a licensed health facility (versus a non-licensed health facility) among those caretakers who sought care outside the home for any diarrheal illness was significantly more common for infants versus older children (aOR = 5.06, CI = 1.88–13.61), when the caretaker had some formal education versus none (aOR = 3.32, CI = 1.56–7.07), when caretakers thought that bloody diarrhea could cause harm or death (aOR = 3.25, CI = 1.16–9.09), when caretakers did not report circumstances that make it difficult to reach their preferred health facility (aOR = 3.90, CI = 1.47–10.35), when the child was lethargic during the diarrheal episode (aOR = 5.73, CI = 1.79–18.42), when the child had been offered ORS at home (aOR = 6.99, CI = 3.01–16.22), and when the child was offered no special (i.e., alternative) remedies at home (aOR = 10.17, CI = 2.84–36.37). The latter may possibly be indicative of caretakers' higher education, which was also a predictor of seeking care at a health facility (aOR = 3.32, CI = 1.56–7.07). Caretakers who did not report looking for thirst as a sign of dehydration were less likely to seek care from a health facility for their child's diarrheal illness (aOR = 0.21, CI = 0.09–0.47) (
Most (89.5%) caretakers indicated that ORSs works well to treat diarrhea. However, only 63 (22.9%) of 275 children with any diarrhea, regardless of severity, were offered ORS at home according to their caretakers. A higher proportion of children with MSD (46 of 182, 25.3%) compared with LSD (17 of 93, 18.3%) were offered ORS at home (
We examined factors associated with the use of ORSs at home for the child's diarrheal illness (
Our weighted analysis estimated that caretakers of 81.5% (CI = 76.5–86.4) of children in the HDSS with any diarrheal episode in the past 2 weeks sought care outside the home. In general, care was sought from licensed providers (57.6%, CI = 49.9–65.5), unlicensed providers (12.5%, CI = 7.2–17.7), and pharmacies (29.9%, CI = 22.5–37.3).
Among children with reported diarrhea specifically in the HUAS-lite, 82.0% of those children with MSD (95% CI = 80.6–83.4) received care outside the home versus 67.3% (95% CI = 65.4–69.2) of children with LSD (when averaged over the five surveys) (
Among those caretakers seeking care for MSD in the HUAS-lite, 61.9% (95% CI = 59.9–63.9) sought care from a health facility; 35.4% (95% CI = 32.8–37.9) of MSD cases seeking care at a health facility specifically visited one of the GEMS case-control study sentinel healthcare facilities (
Our study found that the 2-week period prevalence of diarrhea was 26% at the baseline HUAS and decreased over the five HUAS-lite surveys of caretakers of all children in the HDSS from 11% to 4% between 2009 and 2010. The key findings of our surveys were that less than one-half of children with diarrheal disease receive care at a licensed healthcare facility and that substantial proportions of children with diarrhea are given less food and drink than normal and are not offered ORS. Health use surveys can be helpful in extrapolating burden data from surveillance studies, like GEMS, which use sentinel hospitals to capture patients. Because GEMS calculates population-based incidence of diarrheal disease and its specific attributed etiologies, having reliable estimates on the proportion of children with diarrheal disease who are seen at the sentinel study clinics provides a basis for using a multiplier to adjust incidence rates to account for what was missed because of the surveillance methodology.
These surveys also provide guides to direct interventions to reduce the public health impact of diarrheal disease. For example, our survey documents that ORSs are underused in Kenya,
In developing countries, diarrhea is often inadequately managed at home,
Almost three-quarters of caretakers said that they usually walk the health facility of choice, and 74% of caretakers reported that it takes less than 1 hour to get to their health facility of choice. Moreover, the main reason that caretakers gave for not seeking care outside the home was that children did not seem to need care, which corroborates poor recognition of disease severity in children. Overprescription of antibiotics by clinicians and inappropriate use of antibiotics at home before seeking care have previously been reported in the study area and are responsible for the emergence of antimicrobial-resistant strains of enteric bacteria.
Our study is subject to biases, because we depended on caretakers' recall of the occurrence of the child's diarrheal episode over the previous 2 weeks; also, we assumed that caretakers were familiar with signs and symptoms of diarrhea, such as sunken eyes, wrinkled skin, and dehydration, to classify diarrhea as MSD or LSD. Qualitative behavioral research among caretakers of young children coupled with the HUAS and HUAS-lite surveys would have aided in interpretation of the reasons for the lack of appropriate home management and beliefs related to seeking care. Although diarrhea among young children occurred frequently, it seemed to differ in this community at the time of the one-time cross-sectional HUAS survey (26%) compared with the five HUAS-lite surveys (4–11%). Data were collected from a sample of 1,425 children in the HDSS population in 2007 and the entire population of approximately 21,000 children during five census rounds from May of 2009 to December of 2010; thus, the HUAS-lite estimates are likely more precise estimates of diarrhea prevalence, because we captured the whole HDSS population and not just a random sample as in the HUAS cross-sectional survey. The difference in prevalence between the baseline and census rounds may also be a consequence of the differences in methods used between the baseline HUAS and the subsequent five surveys. The baseline survey was a cross-sectional survey conducted at a single point in time (during a rainy season) among a randomly selected subset of children in the HDSS; in contrast, in the HUAS-lite, which was conducted in the entire HDSS population, we approached all children in the HDSS for interview over a much longer period for each of the five surveys. In addition, there may have been differences in caregivers recall between the two surveys or interviewer bias, because different teams administered the HUAS and HUAS-lite. However, declines in diarrhea have also been noted in HDSS surveillance over the last few years (KEMRI/CDC, unpublished data) as coincident with hygiene and in-home water treatment promotion, increased use of ORSs, and seeking treatment of diarrhea at a health facility among HDSS residents.
This study includes data generated by the Kenya Medical Research Institute/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KEMRI/CDC) Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS), which is a member of the International Network for the Demographic Evaluation of Populations and their Health (INDEPTH). We acknowledge the contributions of and thank the KEMRI/CDC HDSS team, especially the late Dr. Kubaje Adazu (1961–2009); the Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS) Kenya staff for supporting the data collection and processing; Salome Omondi, Caleb Okonji, Alex Ondeng, Peter Jaron, Maquins Sewe, Onyango Emmanuel, and Gordon Orwa at the KEMRI/CDC, Kisumu, Kenya; John Crump, Elizabeth Blanton, and Kavita Trivedi at the CDC, Atlanta, GA; Daniel Feikin at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Baltimore, MD; the GEMS Data Coordinating Center, Perry Point Veterans Administration Medical Center, Perry Point, MD; and Dilruba Nasrin, University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Center for Vaccine Development, Baltimore, MD. We are grateful to the caretakers in the Asembo and Gem community who participated in this work. This manuscript is published with the approval of the director of KEMRI.
Financial support: This study was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation through the University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Center for Vaccine Development, Baltimore, MD (M.M.L., Principal Investigator).
Authors' addresses: Richard Omore, John Williamson, Fenny Moke, Vincent Were, David Obor, Frank Odhiambo, and Kayla F. Laserson, Kenya Medical Research Institute/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Research and Public Health Collaboration, Kisian Campus, Kisumu, Kenya, E-mails:
Prevalence of diarrhea in the last 2 weeks among children < 5 years old and healthcare-seeking pattern for diarrhea by HUAS-lite round from May 22, 2009 to December 31, 2010 in western Kenya
| Characteristic | Round 1: May 22 to August 31, 2009 ( | Round 2: September 15 to December 3, 2009 ( | Round 3: January 28 to April 30, 2010 ( | Round 4: May 27 to August 31, 2010 ( | Round 5: September 14 to December 31, 2010 ( | Overall (rounds 1–5): May 22, 2009 to December 31, 2010 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of HDSS resident children < 5 years approached | 20,256 (19.99) | 20,928 (20.68) | 20,687 (20.42) | 19,691 (19.44) | 19,755 (19.50) | 101,317 | < 0.0001 |
| No. of HDSS resident children < 5 years with interviews conducted | 19,221/20,556 (94.89) | 19,733/20,928 (94.29) | 19,735/20,687 (95.40) | 18,916/19,691 (96.06) | 18,887/19,755 (95.61) | 96,492/101,317 (95.24, 95.07–95.41) | < 0.0001 |
| Any diarrhea | 2,070/19,221 (10.77) | 1,017/19,773 (5.15) | 1,116/19,735 (5.65) | 898/18,916 (4.75) | 738/18,887 (3.91) | 5,839/96,492 (6.05, 5.88–6.23) | < 0.0001 |
| MSD | 1,137/2,070 (54.93) | 539/1,017 (52.99) | 641/1,116 (57.41) | 518/898 (57.68) | 427/738 (57.86) | 3,262/5,839 (55.87, 54.54–57.19) | 0.0351 |
| Sought care outside home | 915/1,137 (80.47) | 425/539 (78.85) | 537/641 (83.78) | 444/518 (85.71) | 354/427 (82.90) | 2675/3632 (82.00, 80.63–83.38) | < 0.012 |
| Sought care from a health facility | 627/915 (68.52) | 276/425 (64.94) | 354/537 (65.92) | 221/444 (49.77) | 179/354 (50.57) | 1,657/2,675 (61.94, 59.98–63.91) | < 0.0001 |
| Sought care from a GEMS sentinel health facility | 227/627 (36.20) | 87/276 (31.52) | 122/354 (34.46) | 77/221 (34.84) | 73/179 (40.78) | 586/1657 (35.37,32.82–37.91) | 0.496 |
| LSD | 933/2,070 (45.07) | 478/1,017 (47.00) | 475/1,116 (42.56) | 380/898 (42.32) | 311/738 (42.14) | 2,577/5,839 (44.13, 42.81–45.46) | 0.0351 |
| Sought care outside home | 609/933 (65.27) | 307/478 (64.23 | 354/475 (74.53) | 269/380 (70.79) | 195/311 (62.70) | 1,734/2,577 (67.29, 65.39–69.18) | 0.2711 |
| Sought care from a health facility | 330/609 (54.19) | 157/307 (51.14) | 186/354 (52.54) | 145/269 (53.90) | 111/195 (55.92) | 929/1734 (53.58, 51.07–56.08) | 0.6290 |
| Sought care from a GEMS sentinel health facility | 94/330 (28.48) | 51/157 (32.48) | 71/186 (38.17) | 39/145 (26.90) | 38/111 (34.23) | 293/929 (31.54, 28.29–34.79) | 0.3695 |
Description of the population surveyed in the HUAS study population in western Kenya in 2007 (unweighted analysis;
| Characteristic | Interviewed caretakers ( | Interviewed caretakers of children with diarrhea in preceding 2 weeks ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percent | Percent | |||
| Child's age stratum (months) | ||||
| 0–11 | 366 | 35 | 112 | 41 |
| 12–23 | 340 | 33 | 108 | 39 |
| 24–59 | 337 | 32 | 55 | 20 |
| Child's sex: female | 501 | 48 | 118 | 43 |
| Primary caretaker of the child interviewed was a parent | 987 | 95 | 266 | 97 |
| Child's mother lives in household | 1,016 | 97 | 271 | 99 |
| Child's father lives in household | 731 | 70 | 194 | 71 |
| Child's primary caretaker completed primary school or above | 549 | 53 | 131 | 48 |
| Median no. (IQR) of people living in house for past 6 months | 5 (4–7) | 5 (4–7) | ||
| Median no. (IQR) of rooms in house for sleeping | 2 (1–2) | 2 (1–2) | ||
| Median no. (IQR) of children ages < 60 months living in house | 2 (1–2) | 2 (1–2) | ||
IQR = interquartile range.
Independent predictors of any diarrheal illness among children < 5 years old in the HUAS in western Kenya in 2007 (weighted analysis;
| Variable | Any diarrhea | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | aOR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted (%) | ||||
| Child's age group (months) | ||||
| 0–11 | 112/366 | 30.5 | 2.27 (1.57–3.27) | 2.19 (1.50–3.21) |
| 12–23 | 108/340 | 31.4 | 2.37 (1.63–3.46) | 2.24 (1.53–3.30) |
| 24–59 | 55/337 | 16.2 | Reference | Reference |
| Child's sex | ||||
| Male | 157/542 | 24.7 | 1.32 (0.96–1.83) | 1.24 (0.88–1.75) |
| Female | 118/501 | 19.8 | ||
| Caretaker knows a child who died of bloody diarrhea | ||||
| Yes | 63/185 | 33.0 | 1.99 (1.34–2.97) | 2.30 (1.50–3.54) |
| No | 207/843 | 19.8 | ||
| Caretaker thinks bloody diarrhea is more dangerous than simple loose watery and cholera-like diarrhea | ||||
| Yes | 159/526 | 26.7 | 1.67 (1.21–2.31) | 1.68 (1.20–2.35) |
| No | 114/514 | 17.9 | ||
| Caretaker knows ways to prevent bloody diarrhea | ||||
| Yes | 102/458 | 17.6 | 0.60 (0.43–0.83) | 0.57 (0.41–0.81) |
| No | 173/585 | 26.4 | ||
Based on the inclusion criteria, 22 variables were initially included in the model; results are shown for the significant variables controlling for age and sex.
aORs, where all ORs control for other factors in the model.
Independent predictors of seeking care outside the home for children < 5 years old with any diarrhea in the HUAS in western Kenya in 2007 (weighted analysis;
| Variable | Sought care outside home for any diarrhea | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | aOR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted (%) | ||||
| Child's age group (months) | ||||
| 0–11 | 76/112 | 67.7 | 0.31 (0.13–0.76) | 0.33 (0.12–0.87) |
| 12–23 | 90/108 | 84.3 | 0.80 (0.31–2.07) | 0.72 (0.26–1.97) |
| 24–59 | 48/55 | 87.1 | Reference | Reference |
| Child's sex | ||||
| Male | 123/157 | 81.9 | 1.06 (0.54–2.09) | 1.27 (0.57–2.81) |
| Female | 91/118 | 80.9 | ||
| Lack of transportation makes it difficult for caretakers to reach their health center of first choice | ||||
| Yes | 51/59 | 90.5 | 2.55 (1.09–5.99) | 3.18 (1.13–8.89) |
| No | 163/216 | 78.9 | ||
| Sunken eyes as a symptom that the child presented with during the diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 145/162 | 92.2 | 6.38 (3.10–13.16) | 4.76 (2.12–10.70) |
| No | 69/113 | 64.9 | ||
| Antibiotic offered to the child at home during diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 38/43 | 93.3 | 3.65 (1.34–9.97) | 3.41 (1.07–10.82) |
| No | 176/232 | 79.2 | ||
| Feeding practices at home during diarrheal illness | ||||
| Offered less than usual to eat | 189/223 | 86.5 | 4.57 (2.06–10.13) | 3.42 (1.37–8.53) |
| Offered usual or more than usual to eat | 23/46 | 58.3 | ||
| Caretaker thinks that medication is the best way to prevent any diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 41/48 | 90.5 | 2.44 (0.99–6.00) | 3.51 (1.27–9.72) |
| No | 173/227 | 79.6 | ||
Based on the inclusion criteria, 16 variables were initially included in the model; results are shown for the significant variables controlling for age and sex.
aORs, where all ORs control for other factors in the model.
Independent predictors of seeking care from a health facility among children < 5 years old with any diarrhea in the HUAS in western Kenya in 2007 (weighted analysis;
| Variable | Sought care for any diarrhea at a health facility | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | aOR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted (%) | ||||
| Child's age group (months) | ||||
| 0–11 | 53/76 | 69.7 | 2.30 (1.08–4.93) | 5.06 (1.88–13.61) |
| 12–23 | 46/90 | 51.8 | 1.08 (0.52–2.22) | 1.35 (0.57–3.21) |
| 24–59 | 24/48 | 49.98 | Reference | Reference |
| Child's sex | ||||
| Male | 77/123 | 54.7 | 1.03 (0.59–1.80) | 0.65 (0.32–1.34) |
| Female | 46/91 | 54.5 | ||
| Caretaker's education | ||||
| More than primary school (some formal education) | 67/104 | 65.1 | 2.35 (1.25–4.44) | 3.32 (1.56–7.07) |
| Less than primary school (no formal education) | 56/110 | 44.2 | ||
| Caretaker looks to see if the child is thirsty to assess dehydration | ||||
| Yes | 34/65 | 43.3 | 0.52 (0.27–1.03) | 0.21 (0.09–0.47) |
| No | 89/149 | 59.4 | ||
| Caretaker perceives that blood in stool can cause harm or death to the child | ||||
| Yes | 112/186 | 57.9 | 2.95 (1.15–7.60) | 3.25 (1.16–9.09) |
| No | 11/28 | 31.8 | ||
| Caretaker never endures circumstances that make it difficult to reach the health facility of choice | ||||
| Yes | 32/42 | 69.7 | 2.25 (0.93–5.44) | 3.90 (1.47–10.35) |
| No | 91/172 | 50.6 | ||
| Lethargy as a symptom during diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 112/185 | 57.6 | 2.41 (0.92–6.30) | 5.73 (1.79–18.42) |
| No | 11/29 | 36.1 | ||
| Child was offered ORSs at home for diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 43/56 | 75.5 | 3.50 (1.57–7.84) | 6.99 (3.01–16.22) |
| No | 80/158 | 46.8 | ||
| Child was offered no special remedies at home for diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 22/27 | 79.1 | 3.73 (1.17–11.86) | 10.17 (2.84–36.37) |
| No | 101/187 | 50.4 | ||
Based on the inclusion criteria, 14 variables were initially included in the model; results are shown for the significant variables controlling for age and sex.
aORs, where all ORs control for other factors in the model.
Independent factors associated with use of ORSs at home among children < 5 years old with any diarrhea in the HUAS in western Kenya in 2007 (weighted analysis;
| Variable | Reported ORS use at home for child's diarrheal illness | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | aOR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weighted (%) | ||||
| Child's age group (months) | ||||
| 0–11 | 20/112 | 17.7 | 0.53 (0.25–1.14) | 0.35 (0.14–0.89) |
| 12–23 | 27/108 | 23.7 | 0.77 (0.37–1.61) | 0.85 (0.35–2.06) |
| 24–59 | 16/55 | 28.9 | Reference | Reference |
| Child's sex | ||||
| Male | 41/157 | 29.0 | 1.78 (0.90–3.53) | 1.64 (0.78–3.48) |
| Female | 22/118 | 18.7 | ||
| Caretaker's education | ||||
| More than primary school (some formal education) | 36/131 | 30.6 | 1.92 (0.99–3.70) | 3.01 (1.41–6.42) |
| Less than primary school (no formal education) | 27/144 | 18.7 | ||
| Caretaker perceives that diarrhea with vomiting can result in harm to or death of child | ||||
| Yes | 48/218 | 21.8 | 0.48 (0.22–1.01) | 0.10 (0.03–0.32) |
| No | 15/57 | 36.9 | ||
| Caretaker perceives that presence of dehydration can result in harm to or death of child | ||||
| Yes | 43/160 | 29.0 | 1.86 (0.94–3.71) | 5.54 (2.23–13.73) |
| No | 20/115 | 18.0 | ||
| Child has vomiting three or more times per day during diarrheal episode | ||||
| Yes | 32/89 | 35.2 | 2.19 (1.12–4.32) | 3.33 (1.56–7.11) |
| No | 31/183 | 19.9 | ||
| Caretaker knows a child who died of bloody diarrhea | ||||
| Yes | 21/63 | 32.6 | 1.86 (0.89–3.88) | 2.73 (1.20–6.20) |
| No | 40/207 | 20.7 | ||
| Feeding practices at home during diarrheal illness | ||||
| Offered usual/less than usual to eat | 59/223 | 28.1 | 5.10 (1.70–15.31) | 8.24 (1.80–37.73) |
| Offered more than usual to eat | 4/46 | 7.1 | ||
| Caretaker believes that breastfeeding prevents childhood diarrheal illness | ||||
| Yes | 3/5 | 69.6 | 7.38 | 16.19 (1.32–199.21) |
| No | 60/270 | 23.7 | ||
Based on the inclusion criteria, 17 variables were initially included in the model; results are shown for the significant variables controlling for age and sex.
aORs, where all ORs control for other factors in the model.
Exact Pearson χ2
Exact Pearson χ2