COSTECH Integrated Repository

Effect of orphan institutionalization on child deprivation, child maltreatment, and quality of life among the orphans in Zanzibar: a cross-sectional study

Show simple item record

dc.creator Omar, Mayasa S
dc.date 2019-09-05T07:03:15Z
dc.date 2019-09-05T07:03:15Z
dc.date 2018
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-20T14:03:13Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-20T14:03:13Z
dc.identifier Omar, M.S. (2018). Effect of orphan institutionalization on child deprivation, child maltreatment, and quality of life among the orphans in Zanzibar: a cross-sectional study. Dodoma: The University of Dodoma
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/1620
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12661/1620
dc.description Dissertation (MSc Pediatric Nursing)
dc.description Background: The problem of orphans is sensitive all over the world and causes challenge in caring and protection of their right and prosperity (UNICEF, 2017a). This study, intended to determine the effect of orphan institutionalization on child deprivation, child maltreatment and quality of life among the orphaned children in Zanzibar. Methods: Analytical cross-sectional study design was employed. Simple random sampling was used to select 374 participants from all five regions of Zanzibar. The study included both children aged 7 to 18 years living in institutions and those living in a home environment with their guardians. Child Orphan and vulnerable children wellbeing tool was used to measure child deprivation. Child traumatic questionnaire were used to measure child maltreatment and World Health Organization quality of life questionnaires were used to measure quality of life. Both descriptive and inferential analysis was conducted by using SPSS version 20 Results: Out of 374 participants 53.7% (201) were female, the mean age was 13 (SD=3.281), and 28.6% (107) were institutionalized in orphanage centers. 129 (34.5%) children were deprived on nutrition, 106 (28%) on education and 178 (47.6%) on health. Also 69% (258) experienced physical abuse, 61.4% (230) emotional abuse, and 4.8% (18) sexual abuse. After adjusting for confounder, being institutionalized was associated with nutrition deprivation (AOR 3.516, 95% CI 3.441, 5.322), education deprivation (AOR 3.509, 95% CI 1.801, 6.835), heath deprivation (AOR 2.464, 95% CI 1.300, 4.670), physical abuse (AOR 2.282, 95% CI 3.826, 5.039) and poor quality of life (AOR 3.713, 95% CI 1.952, 5.064). Conclusion: Child deprivation, child maltreatment and quality of life orphan still are problems which face institutionalized orphans in daily life.
dc.publisher The University of Dodoma
dc.subject Orphan institutionalization
dc.subject Child deprivation
dc.subject Child maltreatment
dc.subject Life quality
dc.subject Orphaned children
dc.subject Zanzibar
dc.subject Orphans
dc.subject Orphans care
dc.subject Institutionalized orphans
dc.title Effect of orphan institutionalization on child deprivation, child maltreatment, and quality of life among the orphans in Zanzibar: a cross-sectional study
dc.type Dissertation


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Omar, Mayasa Suleiman.pdf 2.948Mb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search COSTECH


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account