ACTA SCIENTIFIC MICROBIOLOGY (ISSN: 2581-3226)
Volume 3 Issue 9 September 2020
Care Seeking Behavior of Citizens During Pandemics: A Case Study of COVID-19 in Nigeria
Olufemi Samuel Amoo*
Nigerian Institute of Medical Research, NIMR, Nigeria
*Corresponding Author: Olufemi Samuel Amoo, Nigerian Institute of Medical
Research, NIMR, Nigeria.
Research Article
Received: June 19, 2020
Published: August 31, 2020
© All rights are reserved by Olufemi
Samuel Amoo.
Abstract
The COVID-19 virus is rapidly crossing borders and spreading across countries and the globe, with 212 countries currently af-
fected as of May 2020, 6 months since reports of the first case in November 2019 in Wuhan, China. Global efforts to lessen the im-
pact of COVID-19 pandemic span across surveillance, preparedness, response, prevention, testing, contact tracing, and treatment.
Co-creation Hub (CcHUB) in collaboration with the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR) and LifeBank developed a digital
system to support the process of free testing of suspected COVID-19 cases to respond to the pandemic in Nigeria and deployed it in
Lagos. An average of 25% of suspected cases presented for testing after scheduling appointments, meaning only a fourth of the high-
risk cases as defined by the system were tested, revealing a drop-out rate of 74%. Preliminary analysis seeking to check which factors
are associated with patients who presented themselves for testing yielded no significant factors, forming the rationale for our study.
The study was a cross sectional study, seeking to 1) Understand determinants of healthcare seeking behaviors and healthcare
utilization during a pandemic, 2) Provide information and guide health planners, administrators and policy makers on factors that
enhance effective utilization of structures and platforms for service delivery. The variables collected were: demography and socioeco-
nomic status, health status, satisfaction with healthcare system, satisfaction with NIMR service, mode of transport used/to be used
and general feedback.
Data collection was done using a close-ended survey and social media analysis - analysing twitter sentiments around COVID-19
testing in Nigeria. 300 study participants from a target population of 566 were selected using a simple random sampling for a finite
population. Descriptive statistics and analysis looking for association (odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI), including
bivariate and multivariate unconditional logistic regression) were conducted using STATA 16.
Our results show that distance to facility, preexisting health conditions, knowledge of COVID-19 symptoms, previous healthcare
experience, type of and frequency of communication influence healthcare seeking behavior of Nigerians, specifically during CO-
VID-19. We recommend that the strategic placement of testing centers and increasing knowledge of disease could enhance service
utilization.
Keywords: COVID-19; Degree of Freedom; World Health Organization (WHO)
Abbreviations
API: Application Programming Interface; CCHUB: Co-Creation Hub
Nigeria; CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CHSQ:
Chi-Square; C.I: Confidence Interval; COVID-19: Coronavirus Dis-
ease 2019; Df: Degree of Freedom; HIV: Human Immunodeficiency
Virus; LGA: Local Government Area; NCDC: Nigeria Centre for Dis-
ease Control; NIMR: Nigerian Institute of Medical Research; OR:
Odd Ratio; PII: Personally Identifiable Information; SARS: Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome; T: Hypothesis Test Statistics; TB: Tu-
berculosis; USA: The United States of America; WHO: World Health
Organization
Citation: Olufemi Samuel Amoo. “Care Seeking Behavior of Citizens During Pandemics: A Case Study of COVID-19 in Nigeria". Acta Scientific Microbiology
3.9 (2020): 137-152.