Individual Factors contributing to the prevalence of typhoid fever among patients at Kalagala Health Center IV, Luwero district: Cross-sectional study.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51168/dz3ekh02Keywords:
Prevalence, typhoid fever, Kalagala Health Centre IV, Luwero districtAbstract
Background:
This study investigated the individual factors contributing to the prevalence of typhoid fever among patients at Kalagala Health Centre IV in Luwero District.
Methodology:
A cross-sectional study design was employed, with 60 respondents selected through simple random sampling. Data were collected using structured questionnaires administered by the researcher and an assistant.
Results:
The study included 60 respondents, with the largest proportion aged 26–35 years (41.7%), followed by 36–45 years (25%), 18–25 years (20%), and those aged 46 years and above (13.3%), indicating a predominantly young to middle-aged population. Females constituted the majority at 61.7%, while males accounted for 38.3%. In terms of education level, most respondents had attained secondary education (36.7%), followed by primary education (26.7%) and tertiary education (23.3%), while 13.3% had no formal education, reflecting varied literacy levels within the study population. Regarding marital status, nearly half of the participants were married (46.7%), while 33.3% were single, 11.7% widowed, and 8.3% divorced, suggesting a largely stable but diverse social composition.
Individual related factors indicated risky practices were prevalent, including reliance on borehole 33%, and inconsistent hand washing before eating (42%). Although 50% boiled their water, 20% did not treat their water at all.
Conclusion:
The study concludes that the persistence of typhoid fever at Kalagala Health Centre IV results from a combination of individual risky behaviours, sociodemographic vulnerabilities, and critical weaknesses in the health system`s preventive and outreach capacities.
Recommendation:
A multi-level approach is recommended, including community-led promotion of point of use water treatment and hygiene, health facility-led revitalization and modelling of best WASH practices, and district-level investment in WASH infrastructure and consideration of a typhoid conjugate vaccination campaign.
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Copyright (c) 2026 Gertrude Mutesi, Echo Mugisha, George Masete (Author)

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