Evaluation of the Knowledge of Saudi Women in Childbearing Period towards Toxoplasmosis Induced Teratogenicity – Evidence from A Cross-Sectional Study

Mansy, Wael and Alwhaibi, Abdulrahman and Alqahtani, Ali Mohammad and Al-Arifi, Nasser M. and Alotaibi, Abdulaziz N and Babelghaith, Salmeen D and Aljabli, Norah and Alsubei, Sara and Fayez, Raghad Al and Ameel, Nouf Al and Al-Arifi, Mohamed N (2021) Evaluation of the Knowledge of Saudi Women in Childbearing Period towards Toxoplasmosis Induced Teratogenicity – Evidence from A Cross-Sectional Study. Journal of Pharmaceutical Research International, 33 (60B). pp. 71-79. ISSN 2456-9119

[thumbnail of 6600-Article Text-9019-1-10-20221006.pdf] Text
6600-Article Text-9019-1-10-20221006.pdf - Published Version

Download (384kB)

Abstract

Background: Toxoplasmosis is an environmental teratogen that may disrupt fetal development if transferred to the mother during pregnancy, resulting in maldevelopment and newborn mortality.

Objective: To assess knowledge of Saudi women in their childbearing period as regards risk factors of Toxoplasmosis infestation, testing, awareness of disease manifestation and prevention.

Methods: Anonymous online survey was used to examine the knowledge of Saudi women in their childbearing period about Toxoplasmosis induced teratogenicity. The non-probability sampling yields a calculated size of 600 women. The cross-sectional design of the research required categorizing the questions into two significant portions, one for sociodemographic data and the other for assessing Toxoplasmosis awareness. First, a descriptive statistic summarized the demographic characteristics. In categorical data, chi-square tests were employed to compare groups.

Results: A total of 613 women in their childbearing years completed the questionnaire. Most respondents interviewed were 36-40 (46.7%), and Para 1-5 (80%), and 86% were graduates. In addition, 42.2 % had the basic knowledge of Toxoplasmosis, 25.3 % were aware of the manifestations of the disease, and 76.3% correctly identified premature labor or miscarriage as sequelae of the infection. Aside from the frequency of abnormalities and parities and knowledge of toxoplasmosis, no other demographics in our research sample showed a significant association.

Conclusion: The basic knowledge of Toxoplasmosis among Saudi women of childbearing age is unsatisfactory (42.6 %). Age, family income, educational level and the number of abortions were significantly associated with knowledge of Toxoplasmosis among Saudi women in their childbearing age.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: South Asian Archive > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@southasianarchive.com
Date Deposited: 27 Jan 2023 07:41
Last Modified: 07 May 2024 05:21
URI: http://article.journalrepositoryarticle.com/id/eprint/126

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item