Assessment of Level of Parental Understanding of Thalassemia in Children Attending a Tertiary Care Hospital in District Poonch, Azad Kashmir

Authors

  • Chaman Ara Rathore Aims hospital muzaffarabad Azad kashmir
  • Manzoor Ali Khan AJK medical college / Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad
  • Raja Imtiaz Ahmad AJK medical college/CMH, Muzaffarabad
  • Sehar Anjum AJK medical college / Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad
  • Safia Akhtar Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36283/ziun-pjmd14-4/032

Keywords:

Beta-Thalassemia, genetic Counseling, prenatal Diagnosis, parental Awareness, Consanguinity

Abstract

Background:
Thalassemia is a common inherited blood disorder with a high burden in Pakistan, particularly in areas with prevalent consanguineous marriages and limited health literacy. Awareness regarding its genetic transmission and preventive measures among caregivers is crucial for effective disease control. The present study aimed to assess the level of awareness about thalassemia and its prevention among parents of children diagnosed with beta-thalassemia.

Methodology:
This descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted at the Pediatric Department of CMH Rawalakot from July 2022 to January 2023. A total of 102 parents of beta-thalassemia patients were enrolled through non-probability consecutive sampling. Data were collected via a structured questionnaire covering socio-demographics, disease knowledge, and sources of information. Associations were analyzed using the chi-square test in SPSS version 25. A p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results:
While 64.7% of parents knew thalassemia was a genetic disorder, awareness about preventive measures was limited—only 37.3% had heard of premarital screening, and 28.4% knew of prenatal diagnostic options. Education level was significantly associated with awareness of genetic transmission (p = 0.0017), and urban residence was linked to better knowledge of premarital screening (p = 0.0001). Healthcare professionals were the primary source of information (56.9%).

Conclusion:
Parental awareness about thalassemia remains inadequate, especially concerning prevention. Education and residence are key determinants of awareness. Targeted awareness campaigns and integration of genetic counseling into pediatric care are urgently needed in high-risk regions like Azad Kashmir.

Author Biographies

  • Manzoor Ali Khan , AJK medical college / Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad

    Associate Professor

  • Raja Imtiaz Ahmad, AJK medical college/CMH, Muzaffarabad

    Assistant professor 

  • Sehar Anjum, AJK medical college / Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad

    Senior registrar

  • Safia Akhtar, Abbas Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Muzaffarabad

    Resident pediatric department 

References

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Published

2025-09-29

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How to Cite

1.
Rathore CA, Khan MA, Ahmad RI, Anjum S, Akhtar S. Assessment of Level of Parental Understanding of Thalassemia in Children Attending a Tertiary Care Hospital in District Poonch, Azad Kashmir. PJMD [Internet]. 2025 Sep. 29 [cited 2026 Jun. 3];14(4). Available from: https://ojs.zu.edu.pk/pjmd/article/view/3930

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