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How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria

OBJECTIVES: To assess health professionals' perception and determinants of their health and practice of preventive self-care METHODS: An analytic cross-sectional design was employed, and 232 professionals were selected by stratified sampling from all health professional departments of Delta Sta...

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Autores principales: Obiebi, Irikefe P, Moeteke, Nnamdi S, Eze, Godson U, Umuago, Ibiyemi J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ghana Medical Association 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8042810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33883769
http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/gmj.v54i4.3
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author Obiebi, Irikefe P
Moeteke, Nnamdi S
Eze, Godson U
Umuago, Ibiyemi J
author_facet Obiebi, Irikefe P
Moeteke, Nnamdi S
Eze, Godson U
Umuago, Ibiyemi J
author_sort Obiebi, Irikefe P
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To assess health professionals' perception and determinants of their health and practice of preventive self-care METHODS: An analytic cross-sectional design was employed, and 232 professionals were selected by stratified sampling from all health professional departments of Delta State University Teaching Hospital. Healthcare professionals who had worked in the hospital for at least six months were included in the sampling frame. Pregnant women and supernumerary professionals were excluded. A self-administered questionnaire was used, and data analysed using SPSS. The main outcome measures were the level of perception of self-health and level of practice of preventive selfcare. RESULTS: More than four-fifths of doctors and 64.8% of nurses had good perception of their health, with significant association between perception and service area (X(2) = 11.828, p =0.008). Screening practice was lowest amongst doctors except for HIV/HBV screening. Whereas 63.4% of all participants adjudged their BMI to be normal, only 36.2% actually had normal BMI, the difference being significant (p <0.001). Almost 20% of doctors had not had a BP check in a year or more, and the same proportion of doctors and nurses had never checked their FBS. The proportion of personnel who had never checked their serum lipid profile was high among nurses (76.1%) and doctors (58.3%). CONCLUSION: Respondents had good perception but poor preventive behaviour, beginning management after disease onset. This may be ominous for the sector. Urgent health promotion action to safeguard productivity is needed. Comprehensive data from a multi-centre study will provide a deeper understanding of the issue. FUNDING: None declared
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spelling pubmed-80428102021-04-20 How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria Obiebi, Irikefe P Moeteke, Nnamdi S Eze, Godson U Umuago, Ibiyemi J Ghana Med J Original Article OBJECTIVES: To assess health professionals' perception and determinants of their health and practice of preventive self-care METHODS: An analytic cross-sectional design was employed, and 232 professionals were selected by stratified sampling from all health professional departments of Delta State University Teaching Hospital. Healthcare professionals who had worked in the hospital for at least six months were included in the sampling frame. Pregnant women and supernumerary professionals were excluded. A self-administered questionnaire was used, and data analysed using SPSS. The main outcome measures were the level of perception of self-health and level of practice of preventive selfcare. RESULTS: More than four-fifths of doctors and 64.8% of nurses had good perception of their health, with significant association between perception and service area (X(2) = 11.828, p =0.008). Screening practice was lowest amongst doctors except for HIV/HBV screening. Whereas 63.4% of all participants adjudged their BMI to be normal, only 36.2% actually had normal BMI, the difference being significant (p <0.001). Almost 20% of doctors had not had a BP check in a year or more, and the same proportion of doctors and nurses had never checked their FBS. The proportion of personnel who had never checked their serum lipid profile was high among nurses (76.1%) and doctors (58.3%). CONCLUSION: Respondents had good perception but poor preventive behaviour, beginning management after disease onset. This may be ominous for the sector. Urgent health promotion action to safeguard productivity is needed. Comprehensive data from a multi-centre study will provide a deeper understanding of the issue. FUNDING: None declared Ghana Medical Association 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8042810/ /pubmed/33883769 http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/gmj.v54i4.3 Text en Copyright © The Author(s). https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article under the CC BY license.
spellingShingle Original Article
Obiebi, Irikefe P
Moeteke, Nnamdi S
Eze, Godson U
Umuago, Ibiyemi J
How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title_full How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title_fullStr How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title_short How mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in Nigeria
title_sort how mindful of their own health are healthcare professionals? perception and practice of personnel in a tertiary hospital in nigeria
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8042810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33883769
http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/gmj.v54i4.3
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