Socio-cultural factors explaining timely and appropriate use of health facilities for degedege in south-eastern Tanzania

Background Convulsions is one of the key signs of severe malaria among children under five years of age, potentially leading to serious complications or death. Several studies of care-seeking behaviour have revealed that local illness concepts linked to convulsions (referred to as degedege in Tanzanian Kiswahili) called for traditional treatment practices while modern treatment was preferred for common fevers. However, recent studies found that even children with convulsions were first brought to health facilities. This study integrated ethnographic and public health approaches in order to investigate this seemingly contradictory evidence. Carefully drawn random samples were used to maximize the representativity of the results. Methods The study used a cultural epidemiology approach and applied a locally adapted version of the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC), which ensures a comprehensive investigation of disease perception and treatment patterns. The tool was applied in three studies; i) the 2004 random sample cross-sectional community fever survey (N = 80), ii) the 2004–2006 longitudinal degedege study (N = 129), and iii) the 2005 cohort study on fever during the main farming season (N = 29). Results 71.1% of all convulsion cases were brought to a health facility in time, i.e. within 24 hours after onset of first symptoms. This compares very favourably with a figure of 45.6% for mild fever cases in children. The patterns of distress associated with less timely health facility use and receipt of anti-malarials among children with degedege were generalized symptoms, rather than the typical symptoms of convulsions. Traditional and moral causes were associated with less timely health facility use and receipt of anti-malarials. However, the high rate of appropriate action indicates that these ideas were not so influential any more as in the past. Reasons given by caretakers who administered anti-malarials to children without attending a health facility were either that facilities were out of stock, that they lacked money to pay for treatment, or that facilities did not provide diagnosis. Conclusion The findings from this sample from a highly malaria-endemic area give support to the more recent studies showing that children with convulsions are more likely to use health facilities than traditional practices. This study has identified health system and livelihood factors, rather than local understandings of symptoms and causes relating to degedege as limiting health-seeking behaviours. Improvements on the supply side and the demand side are necessary to ensure people's timely and appropriate treatment: Quality of care at health facilities needs to be improved by making diagnosis and provider compliance with treatment guidelines more accurate and therapies including drugs more available and affordable to communities. Treatment seeking needs to be facilitated by strengthening livelihoods including economic capabilities.

administered anti-malarials to children without attending a health facility were either that facilities were out of stock, that they lacked money to pay for treatment, or that facilities did not provide diagnosis.

Conclusion:
The findings from this sample from a highly malaria-endemic area give support to the more recent studies showing that children with convulsions are more likely to use health facilities than traditional practices. This study has identified health system and livelihood factors, rather than local understandings of symptoms and causes relating to degedege as limiting health-seeking behaviours. Improvements on the supply side and the demand side are necessary to ensure people's timely and appropriate treatment: Quality of care at health facilities needs to be improved by making diagnosis and provider compliance with treatment guidelines more accurate and therapies including drugs more available and affordable to communities. Treatment seeking needs to be facilitated by strengthening livelihoods including economic capabilities.

Background
Malaria continues to be a major public health problem worldwide and one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, despite global and national control efforts. Malaria is one of the five lifethreatening conditions causing more than half a million deaths of African children annually [1]. In Tanzania, malaria is responsible for 34% of deaths among children under five years of age [2]. The global strategy for malaria control mainly focuses on case management, through early diagnosis and prompt treatment of all fever cases in malaria endemic areas [1]. Prompt diagnosis and timely malaria treatment within 24 hours after onset of first symptoms can reduce illness progression to severe stages, and therefore, decrease mortality.
Recent studies point out that before referral rectal artesunate can be given to patients who cannot be treated in time and are several hours away from facilities [3]. If patients cannot access injections or be treated orally, a single artesunate suppository at the time of the referral can reduce the risk of death or permanent disability. Nevertheless, the same multi-country trial showed that there was only a reduction of mortality of patients that were treated no later than six hours. Reaching clinics in time still remains crucial. However, prompt malaria treatment is a major challenge in many developing countries [4].
Before developing a partial immunity, children below five years of age in endemic countries are at a high risk of acquiring a severe form of malaria. Besides contributing to death, severe malaria amongst children under five years of age may cause serious complications, including brain damage and anaemia. The standard treatment of severe malaria is an intramuscular injection or an intravenous infusion of quinine [5].
Convulsions are one of the main manifestations of severe malaria. Several studies on childhood illnesses as reviewed by Williams and Jones [6] have provided contra-dictory evidence with regard to treatment of convulsions. Research in sub-Saharan Africa has revealed that conditions with convulsions as leading symptoms were not linked to malaria, and were primarily treated with traditional practices, as opposed to common fever cases for which modern biomedical treatment was preferred [7][8][9][10][11][12].
In Tanzania, the Kiswahili term used for convulsions in children is degedege. 'Degedege', meaning 'bird bird', is believed to be an evil spirit that takes form of a bird and casts its shadows on children who eventually become ill, develop convulsions and may die [13][14][15]. Fever cases are referred to as homa, and are commonly associated with malaria. Although the link between malaria and convulsions is recognized, degedege and homa tend to be treated differently. Degedege is reported more likely to be managed by traditional practices, while homa is mainly treated by the formal health system [14,[16][17][18][19]. On the other hand, a study conducted in Kilosa and Handeni Districts in Tanzania [20] found that traditional healers encouraged modern treatment-seeking for convulsing children by referring severe cases of malaria to health facility. A recent study using verbal autopsy methodology indicated that 78.7% of malaria deaths in south-eastern Tanzania used modern treatment as the first resort to care [21]. Similarly, vignette interviews in Ghana revealed that more than 90% of respondents identified convulsions as severe conditions and recognized the need to seek modern treatment [22].
Some studies on the other hand showed that children with homa and/or degedege did not attend health facilities due to a number of access related factors, including availability and affordability of services [23][24][25]. Health service studies focus on health system factors and reducing supply barriers to ensure access to health care [26][27][28]. Such studies concentrate on improving the quality of care through ensuring availability of supplies, skilled staff, and quality of service [29].
The present study compared the local understanding and treatment of children under five years of age suffering from degedege with fever cases in rural areas of south-eastern Tanzania. Children under five years were selected because they are most at risk of contracting malaria. Within the study, interviews with caretakers (parents/ guardians) were conducted. The objective of the study was to describe and explain first treatment-seeking for degedege, and to explore how understanding of symptoms and causes related to degedege influence response strategies of care takers.
This study was conducted within the framework of the ACCESS Programme, a malaria intervention aiming at understanding and improving access to prompt and effective malaria treatment in rural Tanzania [4]. The study complements previous research [30] carried out within the same programme to investigate access obstacles to malaria treatment.

Study area
This study took place in the Kilombero and Ulanga Districts in Southeastern Tanzania. The research site is part of the local Health Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) covering 25 villages in the two districts. The programme conducts its monitoring and evaluation activities through this HDSS. Every four months HDSS staff monitor and register all births, deaths, pregnancies, socio-economic indicators, and in-and out-migrations of all residents through household surveys [4]. This allows on one hand the tracking of all individuals and most importantly for this work, to draw an almost perfect random sample, which is essential for the representativity of the results. In 2004, the population of the 25 HDSS villages in Kilombero and Ulanga Districts was 74,200 inhabitants, with an additional 45,700 people living in Ifakara town, the main settlement in the districts [31].
In 2004 there were 14 public and private health facilities in the study area [4]. Moreover over 400 drug shops were present (general shops selling drugs: 454; shops stocking anti-malarials: 54); from 2006 onwards these included among which Accredited Drug Dispensing Outlets (ADDOs), which are allowed to sell a limited range of prescription-only medicine, and so-called Part II drug stores, which offer over-the-counter (OTC) drugs. General shops provide antipyretics, although in some villages they illegally dispense anti-malarials as well. There are many traditional healers providing varying kinds of services ranging from protection of disease, to treatment of illness and other misfortunes associated with witchcraft and spirits [13].
The most common activities are subsistence farming, fishing and small scale trading, with rice and maize being the predominant food crops. Families spend several months in their farming site (shamba in Kiswahili), located at an average 7.5 km away from the main houses in the fertile lower wetlands [32].

Instruments
The present study used a cultural epidemiology approach, and applied a locally adapted and constructed version of the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue [33]. EMIC interviews allow for assessing specified health problems from the local perspective of affected individuals, their families, and/or community members [22]. The interviews aim to gather information on people's knowledge, understanding and experience of diseases such as malaria [13,16]. As a semi-structured interview, the EMIC was applied in the ACCESS Programme in order to collect both quantitative and qualitative information on illness experience, its meaning and related behaviour for fever and degedege, mostly referred to as patterns of distress (PD), perceived causes (PC) and help-seeking (HS) [33]. EMIC interviews extract explanatory models of respondents in their own terms [33] and explain how such models influence particular behaviors. For the purpose of this study, EMIC was employed to understand how explanatory models for degedege influence treatment-seeking behaviours.

Study design
A similar EMIC was applied in three different studies (for details see Table 1): 1. A random sample cross-sectional community fever survey drawn from the HDSS and Ifakara Town areas (N = 80) 2. The longitudinal degedege community study with cases drawn from the longitudinal HDSS surveillance (N = 129) 3. Longitudinal shamba fever study in which a random sample of households was followed during the time spent in their shamba (N = 29).
All studies only included children who had experienced either an episode of fever or of degedege in the past 14 days. For ethical reasons, children who had not recovered the day before the interview were excluded from the study, and those who were still sick at the time of the interviewer's visit were advised to attend a health facility. The EMIC was administered to caretakers of the children immediately after finding the case, except for the longitudinal degedege study, in which interviewers visited the household of the child two to four weeks after a HDSS field worker had identified and reported the illness episode. A caretaker was defined as the parent/guardian who provides the daily essential needs of the child, such as bathing, feeding, clothing, or sending the child to school or to the hospital when sick.
Interviews were conducted in Kiswahili by HDSS field workers and by two trained local interviewers of the ACCESS programme, one doing the interview, a second one recording the answers. All interviews, except those done by the HDSS field workers, were tape-recorded, transcribed and entered into their respective sections in the EMIC. The HDSS interviews were entered directly into the interview questionnaire (EMIC) without being recorded.
For the purpose of adhering to these ethical requirements, all participating individuals who were involved in this project were informed about its aim, the interview procedures, and about their rights as informants before they were asked for their verbal consent. Participation in data collection was voluntary and participants were free to leave at any time.

Sample
(1) For the HDSS community fever survey, a village stratified random sample was drawn whereby the number of households sampled was proportional to the total number of households in the village. In total, 318 households were drawn from the registered 16,220 households in the DSS villages [30]. Only households with at least one child under five years of age were included in the study. Of all 318 households, 58 reported a fever episode in the past 14 days for a child under five years of age. In Ifakara town, there was no updated household list available for sampling purposes. With the support of village and hamlet leaders, the majority of households could be identified and a two-stage random sampling of 223 households performed. Since every household is supposed to be under a ten cell leader a list of all 329 ten cell leaders was established with support from local government officials [30]. A random sample of 35 ten cell leaders was visited for the purpose of setting up a complete list of households within their ten-cells. Six households from each ten cell were then randomly sampled for the study. (2) The longitudinal degedege study was conducted between November 2004 and March 2006 in the area of the HDSS. A total number of 129 households whose children had degedege were extracted continuously from DSS records and followed up for an EMIC interview.
(3) For the shamba study, data were collected between January and August 2005, to examine treatment-seeking patterns during the farming season. Ten out of 25 HDSS villages were randomly chosen for the study. A list of villagers (5,912) who had reported to own a farming plot was obtained from HDSS records. A two stage random sample of 159 households was drawn in proportion to the relative size of the village. Altogether 100 households were eligible for the study, but only 29 households had children below five years of age who had recovered from a fever episode. These households (29) were identified and followed to their farming fields on a monthly basis for an EMIC interview.

Data management and analysis
Quantitative data from the EMIC interviews were doubleentered using Microsoft Fox Pro, and analysed using SAS software (Statistical Analysis of Software Institute, Cary, NC, USA). The analysis was re-computed with reference to illness labels: homa, malaria and degedege. Referring to the national malaria treatment policy, which recommends treatment of malaria within 24 hours of onset of symptoms, children were classified with respect to three outcome variables: (1) 'Timely health facility use' (HF use), defined to include health facility use within 24 hours; (2) 'Timely health facility and anti-malarial use' (HF AM) meaning health facility and anti-malarial use within 24 hours; (3) 'Timely anti-malarial not from the health facility' (AM not HF) refers to children who used timely antimalarial not received from a health facility. The correlation of socio-demographic variables, patterns of distress (illness experiences), and perceived causes (meaning of illness) with the outcome variables were analysed and adjusted in a multivariate logistic regression model.
To clarify the nature of the explanatory model variables and how these explain the outcome variables, the Max-QDA software was used [34]. A coded template for each study was prepared in Microsoft Word, through which qualitative narratives from EMIC interviews were entered before being imported into MaxQDA. Relevant variables were imported from the quantitative data set to select records of particular interest. Content analysis of illness narratives detailed the meaning of categorical codes, and explained the character of correlation identified from quantitative analysis.

Sample characteristics
The socio-demographic characteristics of respondents from the three studies are presented in Table 2. The analysis included 235 children whose caretakers identified the condition as malaria, homa or degedege; three cases that did not fall into any of the above illness labels were excluded. The majority of family caretakers interviewed were women (82.6%) and married (80%). 41.3% of respondents disclosed that their income is not regular or dependable. The majority (94.9%) depended on farming as the main source of income and livelihood. Regarding the place of illness recognition, 73.6% of caretakers recognized the illness of the children at home.
With regard to treatment options for the children, 60.9% of all children with homa, malaria or degedege were reported to have 'timely health facility' use (HF use). Out of these, 57% obtained anti-malarial medicines from the facility (HF AM), and 23% used 'timely anti-malarials not from health facility' (AM not HF) ( Table 3).

Treatment-seeking for homa, malaria and degedege
The demographic characteristics of children in correlation with the outcome variables are presented in Table 3. The sex of the child (female) was associated with less timely health facility use and receipt of anti-malarial medication from the health facility. Being a farmer was also a factor associated with less timely health facility use, but since 95% of the sample were farmers, this could be expected. It was surprising that health facility availability was associated with timely anti-malarial use not from health facility (AM not HF). This is also reflected in the fact that a lack of immediate use of a health facility was observed among children who reported 'timely used anti-malarials not obtained from health facility'. Illness narratives revealed that health facility availability did not motivate caretakers to seek prompt treatment, since they believed that the health facilities would be out of drug stock.
Most of the determinants for 'HF use' and 'HF AM' are similar (Table 3). For the categories of distress, 'no interest to play', 'cough' and 'difficult breathing' were associated with timely health facility use and receipt of anti-malarial from the facility (HF AM), while 'hot abdomen' related more to timely health facility use (HF use). For the perceived causes, people stated that 'eating leftover food' and 'stage of child growth' were more associated with 'HF AM' while 'hereditary causes' and 'bird degedege' were associated with less use of 'HF AM'. On the other hand 'blood weakness' was related to 'timely health facility use and receipt of anti-malarial' (HF AM), while those who mentioned 'contamination' as the cause were less likely to use 'timely health facility and receive anti-malarial' (HF AM).
For the outcome variable 'AM not HF', the categories of distress associated with this response included: 'not happy', 'diarrhoea' and 'shivering'. Whereas, the categories of distress of: 'sleeps', 'hot abdomen' and 'froth in mouth' were the symptoms related to less use of timely anti-malarial not from the health facility (AM not HF). The perceived causes related to the same outcome variable were comprised of: breast-feeding and 'do not know the cause', while bird 'degedege' was associated with less use of 'AM not HF'.

Treatment-seeking for degedege
More specifically, the study narrowed its focus on treatment-seeking patterns for children with degedege (Table 4) compared to homa. For a general fever case definition, the same children had been studied within the ACCESS Programme by Hetzel et al [30], whose interest was to capture the general obstacles to prompt malaria treatment. The present study focuses on how illness experiences and meanings given to degedege influence treatment-seeking patterns.

'Timely health facility use" and "timely health facility and anti-malarial use'
The study found some similarities in determinants of the outcome variables 'HF use' and 'HF AM' among children with degedege. About 71.1% of all degedege cases were 'timely brought to health facility' and the majority (66.7%) received anti-malarial medication from the facility. In comparison, 45.6% of children with homa used timely health facility and 42.7% of them received antimalarial from the facility. Respondents in these groups also mentioned malaria (p = 0.04) and homa (p = 0.03) when talking about the symptoms, indicating that caretakers made a link between convulsions and homa or malaria (Table 4).
Symptoms associated with 'HF AM' included: 'hot abdomen', 'cough', 'no interest to play' and 'difficulty breath- ing'. The following narratives indicate how caretakers explain such symptoms and the need to seek prompt treatment: "The child's fever was very high, you know always the fever starts in the abdomen then goes to the head then comes degedege, the only thing is to rush the child to health facility" (female respondent aged 38 from Minepa village). Another caretaker explained, "the child was coughing and struggling hard to breathe like somebody who has asthma, you know the life of any human being depends on breathing so I was scared that the child might die and took him straight to health facility" (female respondent aged 24 from Mngeta village). The patterns of distress that were associated with 'less health facility use' were 'vomiting' and 'increased sleeping'. These symptoms were viewed by caretakers as unserious and manageable in the household, by purchasing drugs from drug stores.
The perceived causes associated with 'HF use' and 'HF AM' were 'blood weakness' and 'sanitation/dirty environment'. The following narratives explain the perceived causes of

'Timely anti-malarial, not from the health facility'
About 10.4% of children who had degedege used 'AM not HF' compared to 38.8% of those who had homa. The patterns of distress associated with this category include 'diarrhoea', 'twitching' and 'vomiting'. Typical degedege symptoms were grouped together and included 'twitching', 'stiff body', 'delirium', 'eyes turn white', 'kicking of legs and arms', 'froth in mouth', 'mouth twisted sideways', 'falling down' and 'easily startled'. Yet, 'twitching' was the only typical degedege symptom associated with timely anti-malarial, not from the health facility (Table 4). On the other hand, 'easily startled' was the pattern of distress that has a negative correlation with "timely anti-malarial receipt but not from the health facility" (AM not HF). The perceived causes that were associated with 'timely anti-malarial use not from the health facility' (AM not HF) were 'personal hygiene' and 'cold weather'.
Representative narratives revealed that the major reasons for children with degedege receiving timely anti-malarial without seeking care from health facility include a belief in 'lack of drugs' and 'poor diagnosis at health facility'. 'Lack of money to pay for treatment' was also pointed out as a reason not to attend a health facility. Although some caretakers also used traditional treatment as the first aid for degedege, they recognized the importance of timely modern treatment to cure degedege. The following quote illustrates the experience reported: "When I saw my child twitching, I went to the bush and got some leaves called 'manunganunga', which I used to sponge the child, after few minutes the twitching stopped so I took my child to the drug shop and we got an anti-malarial" (female respondent aged 39 from Mpofu village).

Discussion
The study examined local understandings and treatment practices of degedege compared to fever for children younger than five years of age, from the perspectives of their caretakers. This study applied an integrated methodology that examined health system, livelihood, as well as cultural epidemiological determinants of behaviour. The strength of this study lies in the fact that it does not only describe "conventional" factors influencing treatmentseeking behaviour for malaria (e.g. socio-economic characteristics), but also elucidates the significance of illness experiences, meanings and resulting treatment-seeking behaviour, in combination with perceptions on health service delivery. A combination of factors explains treatment-seeking behaviour and is hence key for targeted disease control.
Findings from this study provide both parallel and diverse ideas to previous studies about the role of illness experience, and its meaning for treatment practices of degedege and fever cases. The link between degedege and malaria, that respondents make, is certainly confirmed in this study, unlike other studies in sub-Saharan Africa, as reviewed by William and Jones [6], and in Tanzania in particular, where the two conditions were perceived as distinct [14][15][16][17][18].
The majority of children with degedege were taken to health facilities in a timely manner (71.1%), compared to those who had homa or malaria (45.6%). The finding confirms the study by de Savigny et al [21] which indicates modern care as the first choice of treatment for 78% of fatal malaria cases, and that by Ahorlu [22] where 90% of respondents identified convulsions as severe condition and recognized the need to seek modern treatment. This finding supports that at least in the selected research area there has been a shift in the practices for first treatment of degedege, compared to what has been reported in previous studies for the same area [14][15][16][17][18][19]. Moreover, the results provide information on the differences between the treatment patterns for fever (homa) and degedege. Fever cases have been reported as resorting more to modern treatment approaches than degedege cases [15,18], while the present study found a higher percentage children with degedege (71.1%) than children with fever (45.6%) accessing modern treatment. A number of studies have shown that treatment delay for fever/malaria is due to the perception that this illness is a 'normal everyday illness', and thus not a serious one [7,24,36].
While degedege symptoms were regarded as belonging not to the modern treatment field [14,18], this study attests the use of modern treatment for degedege cases. However, these results can also be attributed to the fact that people in the study area have been exposed to multiple health education campaigns since 1970, including the national 'Mtu ni Afya' (meaning "Man is Health") campaign, which provided intensive information about symptoms, causes, treatment and prevention of malaria [13]. Moreover, in 1996, the study area was marketed via the thorough insecticide-treated nets social marketing campaign [17]. That campaign was preceded by a study [17], which revealed that communities did not link malaria with degedege, and as a result these findings were incorporated in the social marketing to correct the knowledge on linkage between the two. On the other hand, accurate knowledge does not essentially translate into appropriate behaviour, since treatment-seeking is also influenced by a number of other factors [37].
Caretakers of children with degedege who did not use health facilities at all, were less driven by local ideas with regard to the importance of traditional treatment as indicated by various studies [7][8][9][10][11][12][14][15][16][17][18], but instead, by the fact that the health facilities do not always provide ade-quate treatment options, including drugs and proper diagnosis, or that communities lacked the money to pay for treatment, confirming results of a study by Thera [24]. That health facilities are more often used may result from traditional ideas having become less pervasive, or from the fact that in the past there were fewer, or even no health facility options. Yet, the number of health facilities in Tanzania has been comparably high since 1991, when private health facilities were allowed to operate on their own. It is also possible that in areas where a health facility had previously been available, but not used, the association of traditional causes, however valid, was not as influential on behaviour even then.
A number of studies reported delayed health facility attendance and anti-malarial injection for various degedege related symptoms, including eye rolling, body stiffening and foaming at the mouth, which was regarded as fatal and therefore required traditional treatment [14,18]. On the contrary, these findings demonstrate that illness experience of degedege did not hinder caretakers to timely approach health facilities and receive anti-malarial medications. Instead, rather symptoms related to homa, including vomiting and increased sleeping, correlated more with less timely use of health facility than degedege. This particular finding corresponds with results presented by Muela [13], who found that for uncomplicated malaria, vomiting was perceived as a sign of relief, rather than a symptom showing an ascending to complicated malaria, and therefore treatment delay was common.
Spirits, the insect 'degedege', and non-abstinence from sex were the perceived causes of degedege, and associated with less timely use of health facility and receipt of anti-malarial. This finding confirms views from previous studies, where degedege was related by respondents to spiritual causes and hence less likely to trigger the use of health facilities [7][8][9][10][11][12][14][15][16][17][18][19]. However, these ideas were not so influential as to keep the majority of children with degedege from accessing health facilities and receiving antimalarial medication. More importantly, the so called dirty environment (bushes, grasses, stagnant water) were considered as contributing to breeding sites for mosquitoes, which were recognized as the cause of degedege and accelerated the need for prompt treatment. This confirms a study conducted within the same programme [30], which found that for fever and degedege cases, mosquito bites were the most cited perceived cause.
More generally, the findings indicate that symptoms rather than causes are now the drivers of health-seeking behaviour. This may at least partly be attributed to the many health interventions and campaigns carried out in the study area emphasizing the importance of recognizing and responding to danger symptoms. The present study took place two years after the 2002 introduction of IMCI (Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses) devoting training to caregivers on early recognition of dangerous symptoms among children, through which prompt treatment at health facility was highly suggested [38]. The social marketing of insecticide treated nets (KINET) and of prompt and appropriate treatment seeking (ACCESS) program have certainly also contributed.
However it is important to point out that the results of the study are context-based and cannot be generalized. Firstly, the sample size of the study was restricted since it focused on first treatment and was based only on reported fever and degedege cases. Secondly, the study site was influenced by extensive malaria research activities and interventions that have been taking place in Kilombero and Ulanga Districts since several decades. While the results might not reflect the situation in other parts of the country, they provide insights into the effects of interventions such as the ACCESS programme in this area, and may thus inform research, policy and practice.

Conclusion
This study examined caretakers' treatment-seeking patterns for children with degedege and homa, and then compared the findings with results from previous studies focusing on the same theme. Findings suggest that intensive community health education on causes and danger symptoms can trigger seeking of appropriate and timely treatment, and had positive influence on changed healthseeking behaviour in the study area. Health facility use was even higher among degedege children compared to children with normal fever. Furthermore, findings revealed that traditional ideas are no longer a significant influence in delaying health facility use for children with degedege. Even for children with degedege who did not use a health facility at all, reasons associated with this had more to do with poor services in the respective facility, and/or lack of money to pay for consultation and/or treatment, than the belief that degedege is better managed by traditional practices.
The main reasons why services were considered as inadequate were a lack of drugs and competence as well as equipment to make accurate diagnosis. Communities are exposed to insecurities when they lack financial capital, a significant livelihood asset in seeking care, especially when the exemption of children under the age of five who are supposed to receive free treatment in health facilities is not effective [30]. In order to further encourage people to seek timely and appropriate treatment, quality of care at health facilities needs to be improved, through making diagnosis and provider compliance with treatment guidelines more accurate, as well as therapies including drugs more available and affordable to communities. Initiatives for strengthening livelihoods including economic capabilities are also relevant in ensuring prompt and timely malaria treatment. Moreover, further education needs to focus on proper causes of malaria, specifically to correct the inaccurate association of malaria with degedege bird and hereditary causes. Finally, the correlation between female children and less use of timely health facility certainly needs to be explored in more depth since this may reflect a gender bias with regard to early treatment.