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Keys to success for a school-based malaria control program in primary schools in Thailand

School-based malaria control has been recognized as a new approach for the control of this disease in the Greater Mekong Subregion since 2000. We evaluated a school-based malaria control program near the western border of Thailand using a before–after intervention study. The major intervention activ...

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Published in:Parasitology international 2006-06, Vol.55 (2), p.121-126
Main Authors: Okabayashi, Hironori, Thongthien, Pimpimon, Singhasvanon, Pratap, Waikagul, Jitra, Looareesuwan, Sornchai, Jimba, Masamine, Kano, Shigeyuki, Kojima, Somei, Takeuchi, Tsutomu, Kobayashi, Jun, Tateno, Seiki
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c510t-93e8a7a21cd26be3863b4ad99b367e8fd709c102081dfe5e4e641520f4e12b073
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container_title Parasitology international
container_volume 55
creator Okabayashi, Hironori
Thongthien, Pimpimon
Singhasvanon, Pratap
Waikagul, Jitra
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Jimba, Masamine
Kano, Shigeyuki
Kojima, Somei
Takeuchi, Tsutomu
Kobayashi, Jun
Tateno, Seiki
description School-based malaria control has been recognized as a new approach for the control of this disease in the Greater Mekong Subregion since 2000. We evaluated a school-based malaria control program near the western border of Thailand using a before–after intervention study. The major intervention activities included teacher training with specialized malaria teaching materials and participatory learning methods. The target population was 17 school principals, 111 teachers and 852 schoolchildren of grade 3, 4, and 5 in 17 schools. After the intervention, the teachers taught about malaria more actively than before. The teachers who could design a lesson plan on malaria increased from 30.7% to 47.7% ( p = 0.015) and the teachers who had taught about malaria increased from 71.9% to 84.3% ( p = 0.035). As a result of the program, the schoolchildren changed their behavior positively towards malaria prevention with significant difference in 6 of 7 questions. For example, the schoolchildren ‘who always took care of mosquito bites’ increased from 42.7% to 62.1% ( p < 0.001) and the schoolchildren ‘who always reported their parents or teachers when they had fever’ increased from 36.0% to 56.0% ( p < 0.001). In conclusion, the keys to a successful intervention lie in good teaching materials and a participatory approach utilizing the well-established Thailand's school health system. Beyond Thailand, school-based malaria control could be applied to other Greater Mekong Subregion countries with careful analysis of school health context in each country.
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subjects Adult
Child
Curriculum
Education
Education, Continuing
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Faculty
Female
Health Education - methods
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
Malaria - prevention & control
Malaria control
Male
Models, Educational
School health
Schoolchildren
Schools
Students - psychology
Teaching - methods
Teaching - statistics & numerical data
Thailand
title Keys to success for a school-based malaria control program in primary schools in Thailand
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