Pattern of Household use of Traditional Medicines for the Management of Children’s Ailments in the Nzema East District
Date
2000-08
Authors
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Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
The pattern of Traditional Medicine use by households in the management of children’s ailments
was studied, using qualitative methods in the Nzema East district of the Western Region of
Ghana.
The purpose of the study was to explore how the practice interacts with health seeking behaviour
of households in the event of a child falling ill as well as circumstances that contribute to the
practice.
The study was necessitated by complains from the District Health Management Team and other
health personnel, that the use of traditional preparations to manage ailments in children was
having adverse effects on their health.
The major tool used was a household questionnaire administered to 162 households, selected
randomly, from six communities. Additional data was collected from ten herbalists by using a
specially designed interview schedule. Narrative representations of illness (illness stories) were
also collected from 16 households and analyzed.
One important finding was that a new pattern of health seeking behaviour is emerging among
households that use traditional childcare practices as well as modem health care facilities.
Findings have shown that in the event of a child falling ill, households first employ their known
traditional treatment procedures. If these fail, they bypass herbalists in their communities and
send the children to a modem health care facility. However, if they are still not satisfied with the
care, especially in chronic illness, then a health seeking web evolves, in which households visit
the herbalists, go back to hospital and use their own known treatments. This finding seems to
disagree with some earlier findings, particularly those of Melrose, which indicated that about
sixty one percent of mothers take their ill children first to a herbalist before seeking care at a
modem health care facility.
It was also found that communities have their own classification of which ailments of children
are “hospital ailments”, for which they seek hospital care. Fractures and boils among children are
not considered suitable for modem medical care. Athsma and Unossified fontannele are two
conditions of children that are exclusively cured satisfactorily with traditional medicines by either
households or the herbalist.
Though the pharmacological aspects of herbal medicaments used in treating children’s ailments was
not studied, the use of substances such as goats’ excreta, clay and ginger as additives to preparations
for enema, were subjectively viewed, by the researcher, as potentially dangerous to the health of
children. Sharing of syringes used for enema among children was another practice accompanying
childcare that was seen as potentially dangerous.
Reasons for the use of traditional methods for treating children’s ailments included poverty, lack of
access to modem health care, due to various factors, unexplained preferences of households and the
rather relatively easy access to knowledge and supply of traditional medicine. Administration of
enema to children was found to be more of a habit, in most cases, than for any real therapeutic
purpose.
It was recommended that any intervention to control the use of traditional medicines by households
to treat children’s ailments must include expansion of health care delivery, intensive health
education, various forms of empowerment of households, especially mothers and addressing
affordability problems of households to modem health care services. It was also recommended that
the immense enthusiasm shown by mothers in caring for their ill children must be exploited by the
health service to initiate community based healthcare delivery services, in which households will
participate. Finally it was suggested that a long-term project in which communities will be assisted
to cultivate medicinal plants could be implemented once the efficacy of such plants’ medicines have
been proven by community members and not necessarily, by rigorous scientific processes.
Description
Thesis (MPH) - University of Ghana, 2000