TY - JOUR KW - Adolescent KW - Adult KW - Attitude to Health KW - Child KW - Child, Preschool KW - Cross-Sectional Studies KW - Data Collection KW - Female KW - Health Education KW - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice KW - Humans KW - India KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Students KW - Teaching AU - Rajaratnam J AU - Abel R AU - Arumai M AB -
A cross-sectional comparative study on the levels of knowledge and attitude on leprosy among teachers and students was carried out in a rural area of Vellore district in Tamil Nadu, India. A total of 30 teachers and 120 students participated in the study. It was found that knowledge about leprosy among teachers was inadequate. Only 23.4% of teachers stated that germs caused leprosy, while 23.4% mentioned immoral conduct, 20.0% marrying a leprosy patient, 6.6% insects and 26.6% did not know the causes of leprosy. While 80.0% of teachers knew that anaesthetic hypopigmented patches were a sign of leprosy, enlarged painful nerves were not mentioned by a single teacher, although this sign was identified by 17.5% of students. Teachers had a more positive attitude towards leprosy than students and this was statistically significant (p < 0.001). This paper discusses the need for continuous education, especially for teachers and through them the students, using different media so as to ensure sustained knowledge for behavioural change in the community.
BT - Leprosy review C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10405541?dopt=Abstract CN - Infolep Library - available DA - 1999 Mar DO - 10.5935/0305-7518.19990007 IS - 1 J2 - Lepr Rev LA - eng N2 -A cross-sectional comparative study on the levels of knowledge and attitude on leprosy among teachers and students was carried out in a rural area of Vellore district in Tamil Nadu, India. A total of 30 teachers and 120 students participated in the study. It was found that knowledge about leprosy among teachers was inadequate. Only 23.4% of teachers stated that germs caused leprosy, while 23.4% mentioned immoral conduct, 20.0% marrying a leprosy patient, 6.6% insects and 26.6% did not know the causes of leprosy. While 80.0% of teachers knew that anaesthetic hypopigmented patches were a sign of leprosy, enlarged painful nerves were not mentioned by a single teacher, although this sign was identified by 17.5% of students. Teachers had a more positive attitude towards leprosy than students and this was statistically significant (p < 0.001). This paper discusses the need for continuous education, especially for teachers and through them the students, using different media so as to ensure sustained knowledge for behavioural change in the community.
PY - 1999 SP - 28 EP - 33 T2 - Leprosy review TI - Is knowledge of leprosy adequate among teachers? A comparative study. UR - http://leprev.ilsl.br/pdfs/1999/v70n1/pdf/v70n1a07.pdf VL - 70 SN - 0305-7518 ER -