Print Email Facebook Twitter Social Network Analysis of the Schistosomiasis control program in two local government areas in Oyo state, Nigeria Title Social Network Analysis of the Schistosomiasis control program in two local government areas in Oyo state, Nigeria: Insights for NTD elimination plans Author Onasanya, A.A. (TU Delft Design for Sustainability) van Engelen, J.M.L. (TU Delft Design for Sustainability) Oladunni, Opeyemi (Adeleke University, Ede) Oladepo, Oladimeji (University of Ibadan, Ibadan) Diehl, J.C. (TU Delft Design for Sustainability) Date 2023 Abstract BACKGROUND: Schistosomiasis is one of the neglected tropical diseases targeted for elimination by 2030. Achieving disease elimination requires collaboration between stakeholders, country ownership and the involvement of community-level stakeholders. The state of stakeholder relationship determines the ease and timeliness of meeting disease elimination targets. Mapping stakeholder relationships is critical for assessing gaps in the schistosomiasis control program implementation, and providing a roadmap for improved stakeholder cohesion. The study aimed to measure the cohesiveness of the contact, collaboration and resource-sharing networks, across 2 local government areas in Oyo state, Nigeria. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study used a Network Representative design for Social Network Analysis (SNA). The study was conducted within Oyo state, Nigeria using 2 Local Government Areas (LGAs): Ibadan North (urban) and Akinyele (rural). Stakeholders were identified using a link-tracing approach. Data was collected using Qualtrics software from stakeholders across the state, local government, healthcare, academia, and non-governmental organizations. Data was analysed using Gephi software for network cohesion across the three networks. RESULTS: The social network analysis revealed high clustering and low density across the three networks implying low cohesion across multiple stakeholder categories. The contact and collaborative networks were the most active with the lowest level of cohesion seen in the resource-sharing network. Stakeholders were more active in the rural LGA than the urban, and stakeholders within the organized governance and public health system were the dominant actors in the schistosomiasis control program. CONCLUSION: The low cohesion, high clustering and low network density among stakeholders within the schistosomiasis control program should be addressed in other to drive innovation and meet the WHO schistosomiasis elimination target. To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2d7ca7b9-069e-4528-9ce3-5c07f27df20f DOI https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011266 ISSN 1935-2735 Source PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online), 17 (4), e0011266 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2023 A.A. Onasanya, J.M.L. van Engelen, Opeyemi Oladunni, Oladimeji Oladepo, J.C. Diehl Files PDF journal.pntd.0011266.pdf 991.8 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:2d7ca7b9-069e-4528-9ce3-5c07f27df20f/datastream/OBJ/view