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Case Report:
COVID–19 breakthrough infection after four doses of the vaccines: A case report
Hongrang Zhou, Guifu Li, Xiaoming Wang, Zhe Zhou, Wen Kong, Jingfei Hu, Kaiyou Ye, Wenjiang Zhong, Xiaoling Wang, Ning Xiao
One Health Bull
2023, 3:7 (20 April 2023)
DOI
:10.4103/2773-0344.374229
The COVID-19 vaccines provide a high degree of protection against severe disease, hospitalisation, and death. However, no vaccine claimed 100% effectiveness and it is expected that a small proportion of vaccinated individuals may develop a breakthrough infection due to individual differences, virus variants and other factors. We conducted an epidemiological investigation and analysis of an imported case who had finished four doses of vaccination, and in order to provide a relevant reference for regular epidemic prevention and control in the post-pandemic era.
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Original Article:
Knowledge and practice of malaria prevention among residents of Ratuwamai Municipality, Nepal
Rajesh Karki, Niruta Bartoula, Maheshor Kaphle, Sanjaya Kumar Shah
One Health Bull
2023, 3:6 (20 April 2023)
DOI
:10.4103/2773-0344.374224
Objective:
To assess the level of knowledge and practice on malaria prevention among the residents of Ratuwamai Municipality in Nepal.
Methods:
A community-based cross-sectional study was carried out on Ratuwamai Municipality of Ward No. 8 in Morang District, Nepal. A total of 352 respondents with an age range from 15 to 70 years were interviewed from October 9 to October 31, 2022. Statistically significant differences between two or more categorical groups were measured using independent sample
t
-test, one-way ANOVA test, and Kruskal-Wallis
H
test.
Result:
Out of the total sample, 57.7% of the respondents were 24 to 50 years old with a mean age of (36.9±14.3) years. In the knowledge test, 82% of the responses were accurate. Though 98.6% of people had heard of malaria, only 48.3% said it was a communicable disease. In practice, 84.9% always cleaned the surrounding area and trimmed the bushes around the house; 75.9% used insecticide-treated bed nets or normal bed nets for sleeping; only 7.4% used mosquito repellent creams on exposed body parts while staying outdoors at night, working in fields, and sleeping.
Conclusions:
The majority had knowledge about malaria, but more than half had poor practice. We advise concerned authorities to promote the behavior change communication strategy to encourage individuals to adopt healthy, beneficial, and good behavioral practices.
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Online since 29
June 2021