Noma: Experiences of survivors, opinion leaders and healthcare professionals in Burkina Faso

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Authors
Kagoné, Moubassira
Mpinga, Emmanuel Kabengele
Dupuis, Marc
Moussa-Pham, Marie-Solène Adamou
Srour, Margaret Leila
Grema, Maïna S.
Zacharie, Ngoyi-Bukonda
Baratti-Mayer, Denise
Advisors
Issue Date
2022-06-30
Type
Article
Keywords
Noma , Experiences , Survivors , Healthcare professionals , Opinion leaders , Community
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
Kagoné M, Mpinga EK, Dupuis M, Moussa-Pham M-SA, Srour ML, Grema MSM, Zacharie N-B, Baratti-Mayer D. Noma: Experiences of Survivors, Opinion Leaders and Healthcare Professionals in Burkina Faso. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. 2022; 7(7):142. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7070142
Abstract

The scientific literature on noma (Cancrum Oris) has clearly increased in recent decades, but there seems to have been limited analysis of issues around the psycho-social impacts of this disease. Even when these issues have been addressed, the focus has tended to be on patient experiences, whereas the community dimension of the disease and the role of healthcare professionals and community leaders in mitigating these impacts remain largely unexplored. A study in the form of semi-directed interviews with 20 noma survivors and 10 healthcare professionals and community leaders was conducted between January and March 2021 in Burkina Faso with the aim of describing the experiences of noma survivors, generating knowledge about living with the burden of the disease and understanding the attitudes of community leaders towards the disease. The results reveal that noma is a disease that affects economically vulnerable populations and leads to extreme household poverty. As far as treatment is concerned, patients tend to turn to practitioners of both traditional and modern medicine. Within communities, noma survivors face discrimination and stigma. The study highlighted a lack of information and knowledge about noma. However, surgical operations lead to patient satisfaction and these remain one of the coping strategies used to tackle the stigma and discrimination. The recommendations set out in this article are aimed firstly at stepping up research into the psycho-social impacts of noma, and secondly at considering these impacts in regional programmes and national plans to combat the disease.

Table of Contents
Description
Open access article . Click on the DOI to access the publisher's version of this article. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Publisher
MDPI
Journal
Book Title
Series
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease;Volume 7, No. 7
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
2414-6366
EISSN