疟疾和血吸虫病基线流行病学调查显示,尽管马拉维南部奇夸瓦地区正在进行疟疾和血吸虫病控制,但小学中的疟疾和血吸虫病负担令人担忧

IF 1.7 Q3 PARASITOLOGY
Blessings Chiepa , Rex Mbewe , Michelle C. Stanton , Blessings Kapumba , Eggrey Kambewa , Lucy Kaunga , John Chiphwanya , Themba Mzilahowa , Christopher M. Jones , J. Russell Stothard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们的研究目的是在未来与希尔河谷改造计划相关的环境变化发生之前,建立有关赤瓜瓦地区在校儿童疟疾和血吸虫病的当代流行病学数据。我们的横断面调查检测了 21 所政府所有小学的 1134 名儿童(每所学校约 50 名儿童);使用了疟疾快速诊断检测(Humasis Pf/PAN)和肠血吸虫病快速诊断检测(尿液-循环阴极抗原),以及尿液试剂条和卵子过滤显微镜检测尿路血吸虫病。所有受感染的儿童都接受了适当剂量的 Lonart® (治疗疟疾)和/或 Cesol®(治疗血吸虫病)治疗。在 21 所学校中,疟疾的总感染率为 9.7%(95% CI:8.8-10.6%),肠道血吸虫病为 1.9%(95% CI:1.4-2.3%),卵原尿路血吸虫病为 35.0%(95% CI:33.6-36.5%)。疟疾与尿路血吸虫病的合并感染率为 5.5%(95% CI:4.8-6.2%)。在三分之一的学校中,疟疾和尿路血吸虫病的感染率分别高于 10.5% 和 40-50% 的全国平均水平,其中两所学校的感染率最高,分别达到 36.8% 和 84.5%。在疟疾和血吸虫病正在得到控制的背景下,我们的研究揭示了马拉维南部令人担忧的疟疾和血吸虫病负担。这些研究结果要求立即采取缓解措施,大力加强当前的控制干预,以更好地保障儿童未来的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A baseline epidemiological survey for malaria and schistosomiasis reveals an alarming burden in primary schools despite ongoing control in Chikwawa District, southern Malawi

A baseline epidemiological survey for malaria and schistosomiasis reveals an alarming burden in primary schools despite ongoing control in Chikwawa District, southern Malawi

Our study rationale was to establish contemporary epidemiological data on malaria and schistosomiasis among school-going children in Chikwawa District before future environmental changes associated with the Shire Valley Transformation Programme occurred. Our cross-sectional surveys tested 1134 children from 21 government-owned primary schools (approximately 50 children per school); rapid diagnostic tests for malaria (Humasis Pf/PAN) and intestinal schistosomiasis (urine-Circulating Cathodic Antigen) were used, with urine reagents strips and egg-filtration with microscopy for urogenital schistosomiasis. All infected children were treated with an appropriate dose of Lonart® (for malaria) and/or Cesol® (for schistosomiasis). Across 21 schools the overall prevalence was 9.7% (95% CI: 8.8–10.6%) for malaria, 1.9% (95% CI: 1.4–2.3%) for intestinal schistosomiasis, and 35.0% (95% CI: 33.6–36.5%) for egg-patent urogenital schistosomiasis. The prevalence of co-infection of malaria with urogenital schistosomiasis was 5.5% (95% CI: 4.8–6.2%). In a third of the schools, the prevalence of malaria and urogenital schistosomiasis was above national averages of 10.5% and 40–50%, respectively, with two schools having maxima of 36.8% and 84.5%, respectively. Set against a background of ongoing control, our study has revealed an alarming burden of malaria and schistosomiasis in southern Malawi. These findings call for an immediate mitigating response that significantly bolsters current control interventions to better safeguard children's future health.

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