Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.

<h4>Background</h4>Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) continue to significantly impact marginalized communities, contributing to high morbidity, stigma, and social exclusion. Traditional health education strategies often fail to engage affected populations effectively. This study evaluat...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Uchechukwu M Chukwuocha, Ayoola O Bosede, Chidubem D Osuji, Adanna N Chukwuocha, Harriet Abugewa, Amarachi Amawuru, Adesua Okoroh, Akuchi Echefula, Precious Nwabueze, Nathan Ukwenga, Alfred Barile
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-07-01
Series:PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0013266
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849427478872850432
author Uchechukwu M Chukwuocha
Ayoola O Bosede
Chidubem D Osuji
Adanna N Chukwuocha
Harriet Abugewa
Amarachi Amawuru
Adesua Okoroh
Akuchi Echefula
Precious Nwabueze
Nathan Ukwenga
Alfred Barile
author_facet Uchechukwu M Chukwuocha
Ayoola O Bosede
Chidubem D Osuji
Adanna N Chukwuocha
Harriet Abugewa
Amarachi Amawuru
Adesua Okoroh
Akuchi Echefula
Precious Nwabueze
Nathan Ukwenga
Alfred Barile
author_sort Uchechukwu M Chukwuocha
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) continue to significantly impact marginalized communities, contributing to high morbidity, stigma, and social exclusion. Traditional health education strategies often fail to engage affected populations effectively. This study evaluates the impact of a community public art as an innovative tool for improving knowledge, shifting attitudes, enhancing preventive practices, and reducing stigma related to NTDs in Okwelle Community, Imo State, Nigeria.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>A mixed-methods implementation research design was employed, involving 724 participants (362 at pretest and 362 at posttest). Public art installations depicting common NTDs in the study location including, Onchocerciasis, Buruli ulcer, and Lymphatic filariasis, were strategically placed in community spaces. Pretest and posttest surveys, key informant interviews, and focus group discussions were conducted to elucidate information about the influence of the public art on knowledge improvement and perception shifting. Quantitative data were analyzed using chi-square tests. Findings revealed a significant increase in NTDs awareness post-intervention (p < 0.05). Identification of disease symptoms improved, misconceptions regarding supernatural causation decreased, and preventive behaviors such as healthcare-seeking and participation in community health programs increased. Stigma reduction was evident, with greater acceptance of affected individuals and increased willingness to interact with them. Notably, 98.3% of participants supported maintaining public art as an educational tool.<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>Public art can be a powerful and culturally relevant medium for enhancing NTDs awareness, promoting behavior change, and reducing stigma in endemic communities. This study highlights its potential for integration into broader public health strategies to improve disease awareness and community participation. Future research should explore the scalability and long-term sustainability of public art interventions in diverse settings.
format Article
id doaj-art-225d772c8d19484989ecb2eaabdb09a0
institution Kabale University
issn 1935-2727
1935-2735
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
spelling doaj-art-225d772c8d19484989ecb2eaabdb09a02025-08-20T03:29:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases1935-27271935-27352025-07-01197e001326610.1371/journal.pntd.0013266Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.Uchechukwu M ChukwuochaAyoola O BosedeChidubem D OsujiAdanna N ChukwuochaHarriet AbugewaAmarachi AmawuruAdesua OkorohAkuchi EchefulaPrecious NwabuezeNathan UkwengaAlfred Barile<h4>Background</h4>Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) continue to significantly impact marginalized communities, contributing to high morbidity, stigma, and social exclusion. Traditional health education strategies often fail to engage affected populations effectively. This study evaluates the impact of a community public art as an innovative tool for improving knowledge, shifting attitudes, enhancing preventive practices, and reducing stigma related to NTDs in Okwelle Community, Imo State, Nigeria.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>A mixed-methods implementation research design was employed, involving 724 participants (362 at pretest and 362 at posttest). Public art installations depicting common NTDs in the study location including, Onchocerciasis, Buruli ulcer, and Lymphatic filariasis, were strategically placed in community spaces. Pretest and posttest surveys, key informant interviews, and focus group discussions were conducted to elucidate information about the influence of the public art on knowledge improvement and perception shifting. Quantitative data were analyzed using chi-square tests. Findings revealed a significant increase in NTDs awareness post-intervention (p < 0.05). Identification of disease symptoms improved, misconceptions regarding supernatural causation decreased, and preventive behaviors such as healthcare-seeking and participation in community health programs increased. Stigma reduction was evident, with greater acceptance of affected individuals and increased willingness to interact with them. Notably, 98.3% of participants supported maintaining public art as an educational tool.<h4>Conclusions/significance</h4>Public art can be a powerful and culturally relevant medium for enhancing NTDs awareness, promoting behavior change, and reducing stigma in endemic communities. This study highlights its potential for integration into broader public health strategies to improve disease awareness and community participation. Future research should explore the scalability and long-term sustainability of public art interventions in diverse settings.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0013266
spellingShingle Uchechukwu M Chukwuocha
Ayoola O Bosede
Chidubem D Osuji
Adanna N Chukwuocha
Harriet Abugewa
Amarachi Amawuru
Adesua Okoroh
Akuchi Echefula
Precious Nwabueze
Nathan Ukwenga
Alfred Barile
Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
title Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
title_full Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
title_fullStr Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
title_short Assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge, attitude, practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in South Eastern, Nigeria.
title_sort assessment of the effectiveness of public art in improving knowledge attitude practices and mitigation of stigmatization regarding neglected tropical diseases in south eastern nigeria
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0013266
work_keys_str_mv AT uchechukwumchukwuocha assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT ayoolaobosede assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT chidubemdosuji assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT adannanchukwuocha assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT harrietabugewa assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT amarachiamawuru assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT adesuaokoroh assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT akuchiechefula assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT preciousnwabueze assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT nathanukwenga assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria
AT alfredbarile assessmentoftheeffectivenessofpublicartinimprovingknowledgeattitudepracticesandmitigationofstigmatizationregardingneglectedtropicaldiseasesinsoutheasternnigeria