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Assessment of utilization of primary health care services among settled Fulani agro-pastoralists in Ogun State, Nigeria


C.I. Alarima
F.E. Obikwelu

Abstract

Utilization of primary health care services among settled Fulani agro-pastoralists in Ogun State was assessed in this study. Sixty (60) respondents were purposefully selected and interviewed using an interview guide. The data obtained were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The study revealed that the mean age of the respondents was 35.82, 68.3% of the respondents were females and majority (80.0%) of the respondents have no formal education. The results showed that friends and relatives were the main sources of information on primary health care services. About 90.0% of the respondents had positive attitude towards the use of primary healthcare services. The study also revealed that respondents visits primary health facility for pharmacy/dispensary (95.0%), maternity (98.3%) and vaccination/immunization (86.7%). The result of the study revealed that the most pressing constraint faced by the agro-pastoralists was the distance of health facility from their settlement. Regression analysis showed that income, distance from home to health care center, information, attitude and constraints face influenced the utilization of primary healthcare services among the respondents. The study recommends that government should build health centres close to the agro-pastoralists to reduce the cost of medical services accessed by the pastoralists.

Keywords: Fulani, healthcare, Ogun State, pastoralist, utilization


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eISSN: 1119-7455