1. Introduction
Tungiasis is a neglected parasitic skin disease caused by the sand flea
Tunga penetrans. It is widespread throughout sub-Saharan Africa and South America, particularly among the most marginalized populations [
1,
2]. Female sand fleas burrow into the skin of humans and animals, usually in the feet, where they grow and shed eggs onto the ground [
1,
3]. A risk factor analysis from Kenya identified regular washing of the feet with soap as well as frequent cleaning of house floors as protective factors, and consequently, lack of access to water and soap as a risk factor for tungiasis [
4]. To date, the only safe tungiasis treatment proven to kill sand fleas is topical application of dimeticone oils (NYDA
®), which seal the respiratory and reproductive systems of embedded sand fleas [
5,
6,
7,
8]. However, dimeticone oils are hardly ever available to affected communities. In absence of effective treatment, people commonly turn to extracting sand fleas manually with inadequate, non-sterile instruments, like thorns or safety pins [
5,
9]; a painful and hazardous method which can lead to serious infections and mutilations [
5,
10].
Population-based studies have shown high prevalence of tungiasis, for example, 25% in rural Kenya [
4], 45% in rural Nigeria [
11], and 43% in Brazilian fishing villages [
12], and very severe cases with hundreds of sand fleas have been described in Tanzania, Colombia, and Madagascar [
2,
13,
14]. In Napak District, rural northeastern Uganda, our study team recently found extremely high tungiasis prevalence of 62.8% [
15]. Despite its endemic presence in many countries, tungiasis has been neglected by healthcare professionals and researchers alike [
1,
16].
Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are known to be highly stigmatized, not least because of their association with poverty [
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22]. NTDs are also understudied, and this is even more true for NTD-related stigma [
18,
21], with the exception of widely studied leprosy stigma [
17,
23,
24,
25,
26]. Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and economic impact of specific NTDs have been useful to demonstrate disease burden, but more attention needs to be paid to the problem of social stigma [
21].
Stigma reduces life opportunities, exposes those affected to discrimination, and negatively affects mental and physical health [
27]. Health-related stigma has been described as “a social process or related personal experience characterized by exclusion, rejection, blame, or devaluation that results from experience or reasonable anticipation of an adverse social judgment about a person or group identified with a specific problem” [
28] (p. 280). In relation to NTDs, stigma not only adds significant psychological suffering to physical and economic hardship, but the resulting social isolation can further trap those affected in a cycle of poverty [
13,
18]. Neglected diseases are, in fact, diseases of neglected people [
29,
30]. This calls for a bio-social approach that goes beyond drug administration and takes into account local practices and power dynamics [
31], thus highlighting the social factors that contribute to continued morbidity [
32].
This study aims at developing such a bio-social approach to tungiasis control and stigma in the impoverished Napak District in northeastern Uganda, where tungiasis is hyperendemic. The aim of this study was to investigate local attitudes and control practices regarding tungiasis, with a focus on stigma. We ask:
What are people’s attitudes towards tungiasis?
How does stigma play out when a condition is so common that most people are affected?
How does stigma relate to local tungiasis control practices?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Context
This article presents stigma-related data derived from a household-based knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) survey (
Supplement S1), conducted between February and September 2021.
This study took place during the initial phase of a two-year long tungiasis control intervention project (2021/2022), the results of which are published elsewhere in this issue [
15]. The larger intervention aimed at eliminating tungiasis as a public health problem in the area and included regular screening of the population for tungiasis; treatment of cases with a mixture of two dimeticone oils (NYDA
®); and tungiasis-related health education and community engagement in Napak District, Uganda.
Our study team applied a KAP questionnaire to a representative member of each household in the study area who identified as the main household caretaker. We included 1329 out of a total of 1338 households in the study area (nine did not consent). Households included in the study presented here had not been exposed to the intervention at the time of data collection, i.e., they had not previously been examined for tungiasis and had not received tungiasis-related treatment or health information from our team.
2.2. Study Site and Population
The study took place in 17 villages located in three of the five parishes that constitute the Ngoleriet Subcounty in Napak district, Karamoja region, northeastern Uganda. Based on the national census in 2014 and local population growth rates, the total population of Ngoleriet Subcounty in 2021 has been estimated at 13,400 [
33]. This rural study area was chosen because the District Health Office had alerted our study team to the high occurrence of tungiasis in the area. In a fact-finding pilot study in November 2020, our team confirmed that tungiasis was highly prevalent in the three parishes, using rapid assessment for tungiasis [
34] in 11 villages. The pilot study showed a tungiasis prevalence of 68.5% (n = 456) among 666 examined individuals [
15].
The total population of the 17 villages in our study area was 5482 individuals during the project’s baseline evaluation in February/March 2021 [
15]. They belong to the semi-nomadic Karamojong ethnic group living in small villages which were further compartmentalized into
manyatas, groups of houses surrounded by stick fences as protection against wild animals and animal raiders. Karamoja has a long history of animal raids and ethnic conflict and has long been a marginalized region in Uganda with widespread poverty [
35]. Houses in the study area were predominantly made of sticks with grass roofs and earthen floors, which were sometimes smeared with cow dung to harden and smoothen the surface. Living conditions in the study area were generally very poor, and hunger and malnourishment were common (unpublished observation, F.M. and M.B.). Access to water was limited, as the few existing boreholes and shared water taps were located at distances up to 3 km from people’s homes and were prone to breaking. Traditionally, Karamojong men are cattle herders [
35], and only few animals were kept in the villages, while most were taken to other places for grazing and to protect them from raids. Women usually stayed in the villages when men were away herding the animals. In addition to cattle herding, small-scale crop farming and low-wage day labor were common sources of income. The local population had very limited access to formal medical care, as health units were understaffed and located far away from the villages.
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
Data was collected by Village Tungiasis Health Workers (VTHW), who had been trained over seven days particularly for this study and the tungiasis intervention program. They were supported by Village Health Teams (VHT) and local village leaders who mainly worked as mobilizers. The VTHW consisted of bi-lingual, literate individuals local to the study area who communicated with the respondents in Ngakarimojong language and recorded their answers in English. They were accompanied by members of our research team (F.M. and M.B.) as well as a study nurse and a social worker who assisted them in using mobile phones to record questionnaire data in ODK collect, an open-source digital Android app.
Our team designed the KAP questionnaire specifically for the tungiasis project. It consists of 50 questions, including binary questions, questions with multiple answer options, and open-text questions. Questions with pre-defined response options were not read aloud to respondents to avoid influencing their answers. Instead, the data collector chose the response category that best fitted the given answer. Responses to open-text questions were summarized and entered into an open-text box by the data collector. The questionnaire also asked about the sociodemographic information of our respondents.
Following the questionnaire interview, VTHWs physically examined the participants for tungiasis on the feet and other potentially exposed body sites. Tungiasis cases were treated topically with dimeticone oils (NYDA®).
Questionnaire data and clinical data about tungiasis infection were transferred to Microsoft Excel (2016) and double-checked for consistency. For this article, we purposely selected 11 relevant questions from the KAP survey that related to stigma and tungiasis control practices (
Supplementary S1). One of these questions was from the “knowledge” section of the questionnaire, four from the “attitudes” section, and six from the “practices” section. We performed statistical analysis in Microsoft Excel (2016) and SPSS (IBM SPSS Statistics Version 25). Open-text questions were thematically analyzed by clustering similar answers (coding) and defining labels for the resulting thematic categories [
36]. This approach allowed us to subsequently quantify frequencies of the identified response categories.
2.4. Ethical Considerations
Informed written consent was taken from each study participant. The VTHWs explained the aims and methods of the study in simple words in Ngakarimojong language, and individuals had time to ask any questions. Refusal to participate in the survey did not affect the right to be treated for tungiasis. Study participants gave consent by signing a form that was read out to them or by providing their fingerprint if they could not write their name. In the case of minors (under 18 years of age), both the minor and an adult caretaker were asked for informed written consent. The questionnaire interviews and physical examinations were conducted in a place chosen by the respondent.
Ethical approval for this study and the intervention program was given by the Vector Control Division of the Ugandan Ministry of Health Ethical Committee (Ref: VCDREC112/UG-REC-018) and the Uganda National Council of Science and Technology (Ref: HS2623).
3. Results
Our 1329 questionnaire respondents represented their households as the family members who took on most of the caring responsibilities in the household. Sociodemographic characteristics are presented in
Table 1. Our respondents were mostly women (89.4%), and the median age of the respondents was 44 years (min 9 years/max 115 years). Respondents most frequently described their main occupation as casual labor (43.2%) or “none” (29.1%); and some as small-scale crop farming (14.9%); small business (9.1%); and other occupations (3.7%) that include students, employees, and others. Formal education levels among our respondents were extremely low; the vast majority (84.7%) had never attended school (
Table 1).
The prevalence of tungiasis among our respondents was very high. Physical examination showed that tungiasis was present in 811 (61.0%; 95%CI 58.3–63.7%) of our 1329 respondents. Among the respondents with tungiasis, the median number of lesions was 14 (min/max: 1/591; IQR 23).
Tungiasis was not only very common but was also perceived as a potentially serious and debilitating condition. When asked if tungiasis could cause severe illness, almost all respondents (
n = 1293/1329; 97.3%) answered “yes”. When asked if tungiasis affected their everyday life, over half of the respondents (
n = 734/1329; 55.2%) said “yes”, referring to their own and/or their family members’ tungiasis infection. Those who had answered “yes” were asked how tungiasis affected people’s lives. The most frequently described impact was difficulty to walk and work, followed by loss of appetite and weight, fear of death, and isolation/social problems (
Table 2).
3.1. Embarrassment
Despite the very high prevalence of tungiasis in the community, over half of the 1329 respondents (
n = 719; 54.1%) said they felt embarrassed when having sand fleas. Examples for reported reasons for tungiasis-related embarrassment are: “[Tungiasis] brings public shame and isolation”; “They will talk and laugh about people with jiggers”; and “People begin abusing because it shows that you are not responsible towards yourself”. Most frequently, responses referred to feelings of shame, fear of social isolation and stigmatization, severe pain, being ridiculed/talked about/abused, intense itching, and fear of dying (
Table 3). It should be noted that these categories are not well-distinguished from each other. The category “feelings of shame”, for example, may include all the other listed reasons for embarrassment, and “fear of social isolation and stigmatization” may also refer to, for example, the result of “being ridiculed, talked about, and abused” because of severe pain or itching that was difficult to hide.
Table 3 thus displays various interconnected aspects of tungiasis-related embarrassment. These responses demonstrate that even in a community with a very high prevalence of tungiasis, embarrassment around the condition persists.
3.2. Association of Tungiasis with Lack of Hygiene
The KAP questionnaire further revealed that respondents frequently associated tungiasis with dirty homes and lack of bodily hygiene. When asked to name different factors that increased the chances of an individual to contract tungiasis, the most frequent answers were dirty/dusty floor in the house, mentioned by 86.5% of respondents (n = 1150); poor bodily hygiene, named by 70.5% of respondents (n = 937); and poor housing, specified by 59.7% of respondents (n = 793). In accord with the notion that lack of hygiene caused tungiasis, the most frequently named methods for tungiasis control were regular washing of the feet, named by 90.4% of respondents (n = 1202), and keeping the houses/compounds clean, mentioned by 76.2% of respondents (n = 1013). In short, our respondents perceived failure of keeping one’s body and home clean as the most important risk factors for tungiasis.
3.3. Attitudes towards People with Tungiasis
Our field team asked the respondents “What do you think about people with tungiasis?”, and coding of the responses resulted in the response categories shown in
Table 4. We grouped these categories as “judging attitudes”, “compassionate attitudes”, and “other comments”. “Judging attitudes” were displayed by 42.0% of our respondents and included characterizations of people with tungiasis as lazy, careless, dirty, irresponsible, and drunkards. Compassionate attitudes were expressed by 36.3% of our respondents. They included the representation of people with tungiasis as in need of help, being very sick, being elderly or disabled, being people too, as well as expressions of sympathy, such as “I feel sorry for them”. Other comments could not clearly be labelled as either judging or compassionate. These included the view that people with tungiasis needed more advice on how to prevent or treat sand fleas, and other statements (
Table 4).
Judging attitudes were very widespread despite the very high prevalence in the community and the fact that most respondents had tungiasis themselves at the time of data collection. Members of our field team (F.M. and M.B.) clarified that having a few sand fleas was seen as normal in the villages, and that respondents will most likely have referred to severe cases of tungiasis in their responses. To investigate the stigmatization of heavy tungiasis infection further, we separately analyzed responses of individuals with 30 or more tungiasis lesions on the body, defined as heavy tungiasis infection [
37]. At the point of data collection, 193 (14.5%) of our 1329 respondents had heavy tungiasis infection. As expected, they expressed more compassionate attitudes (52.9%;
n = 102), primarily sympathy (21.2%;
n = 41) and the need for help (16.1%; n = 31). However, even among the heavily affected, 21.2% (
n = 41) displayed judging attitudes by labelling people with tungiasis as lazy (8.8%;
n = 17), careless (6.2%;
n = 12), irresponsible (4.1%;
n = 8), and dirty (2.1%;
n = 4).
3.4. Treatment and Prevention Practices
When asked how they treated tungiasis in their families, 84.1% (
n = 1119) of respondents named extraction with sharp instruments like thorns, needles, pins, and razor blades, and 14.8% (
n = 197) said they applied various substances (
Table 5), mainly greasy products like petroleum jelly. When asked about additional treatment practices, 74 (5.6%) mentioned manual extraction of sand fleas, which raises the reported prevalence of this practice to 89.7% (
n = 1193).
Those who had stated manual extraction of sand fleas as the main treatment (n = 1119) were asked about details of their extraction practice (
Table 6). The majority (63.8%) said they shared their extraction instruments with others, and 53.1% said they boiled them. Use of antiseptics was reported by 14.3%, and 58.4% (
n = 654) named one or several substances they applied to the wound after extraction. Hot or cold ash (
n = 342) and tobacco (
n = 296) were mentioned most often, together with greasy substances (
n = 67) like petroleum jelly. Some also mentioned cooking oil, castor oil, paraffin, and harmful substances like used engine oil, diesel, and petrol. These substances were often applied as mixtures, for example cooking oil mixed with tobacco and ash. Furthermore, 25 respondents named herbal remedies, including
aloe vera, milk bush sap, balamite, a local tree called
epuu, a fruit called
eome, seeds from the
ekolej tree, and others.
In the study area, the houses had earthen floors. People habitually walked barefoot or used rubber sandals. The great majority of respondents (93.8%) stated that they washed their feet once or several times per day (
Table 7). Similarly, most respondents reported that they swept their houses and their compounds daily (83.5% and 76.1, respectively). Only a small minority said they swept their houses and their compounds less than every other day (4.8% and 10.8%, respectively).
In addition to sweeping, 260 respondents (19.6%) said they had applied commercial insecticides in their houses in the past, namely the toxic substances “Dudu Dust” (carbaryl) [
38] and “Supona” (chlorfenviphos) [
39]. However, our field team observed that insecticides were rarely available (unpublished observation, F.M. and M.B.). Several respondents also mentioned smearing house floors with cow dung as a traditional way of keeping them smooth and clean, but as most cattle was herded away from the villages, cow dung was scarce (unpublished observation, F.M. and M.B.).