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. 2019 Apr 11;18:130. doi: 10.1186/s12936-019-2766-2

Table 2.

General and socio-demographic characteristics of participants

Characteristics Southern; n = 1096 Western; n = 471
n (%) CI n (%) CI
Gender
 Male 505 (46.1) 43.6–48.5 210 (44.6) 39.5–49.8
 Female 591 (53.9) 51.5–56.4 261 (55.4) 50.2–60.5
Age of children (years)
 < 5 197 (18.0) 14.2–22.5 86 (18.3) 15.6–21.2
 5–10 200 (18.3) 16.0–20.7 87 (18.5) 14.9–22.6
 11–15 178 (16.2) 13.5–19.4 69 (14.7) 10.6–20.0
 16–25 140 (12.8) 10.5–15.5 72 (15.3) 11.8–19.6
 26–40 191 (17.4) 15.1–20.0 59 (12.5) 7.4–20.3
 40–94 190 (17.7) 14.3–20.8 98 (20.8) 17.6–24.4
Travel history
 Yes 6 (0.5) 0.2–1.4 23 (4.9) 1.7–13.2
 No 1089 (99.5) 98.6–99.8 445 (95.1) 86.8–98.3
Household sprayed
 Yes 730 (67.2) 52.4–79.1 149 (31.6) 8.7–69.1
 No 357 (32.8) 20.8–47.6 322 (68.4) 30.9–91.2
ITN ownership
 Yes 673 (61.4) 38.8–80.0 269 (57.1) 29.2–81.1
 No 13 (1.2) 0.1–9.7 8 (1.7) 0.3–8.6
 Missing information 410 (37.4) 18.7–60.8 194 (41.2) 17.1–70.4
Cluster
 Average no of people/cluster 156.5 78.5
 Number of clusters 7 6

The tables shows the general and socio-demographic characteristics of the participant in the two study areas