| Literature DB >> 16956417 |
Luis Quihui1, Mauro E Valencia, David W T Crompton, Stephen Phillips, Paul Hagan, Gloria Morales, Silvia P Díaz-Camacho.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intestinal parasitic infections are a public health problem in developing countries such as Mexico. As a result, two governmental programmes have been implemented: a) "National Deworming Campaign" and b) "Opportunities" aimed at maternal care. However, both programmes are developed separately and their impact is still unknown. We independently investigated whether a variety of socio-economic factors, including maternal education and employment levels, were associated with intestinal parasite infection in rural school children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16956417 PMCID: PMC1584408 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-6-225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
The prevalence distributions of parasites of 507 rural schoolchildren 6–10 years from 12 rural communities of two Mexican states. 1997–2000.
| Infection | Prevalence % (n)f | 95%CIa |
| Polyparasitismb | 57 (289) | 53–61 |
| Helminth Infectionc | 53 (269) | 48–57 |
| Protozoan Infectiond | 63 (319) | 59–67 |
| Pathogenic sp. | ||
| | 9 (46) | 7–11 |
| | 16 (81) | 13–19 |
| | 24 (122) | 20–28 |
| | 5 (25) | 3–7 |
| | 23 (117) | 19–27 |
| Non-pathogenic sp. | ||
| | 46 (233) | 42–50 |
| | 38 (193) | 34–42 |
a Confidence interval; b Infection with two or more pathogenic and/or non-pathogenic parasites; c Infection with helminths only; d Infection with protozoa only; f Number of children.
Comparison of the prevalence of intestinal parasitic infections in 507 rural schoolchildren aged 6–10 years between two Mexican states.
| Sinaloa (n = 356) | Oaxaca (n = 151) | ||||
| Prevalence% (n)f | 95%CIa | Prevalence % (n)f | 95%CIa | p valuee | |
| Polyparasitismb | 51 (182) | 42–60 | 54 (82) | 48–59 | 0.77 |
| Helminth Infectionc | 33 (117) | 25–41 | 53 (80) | 47–59 | <0.0001 |
| Protozoan Infectiond | 61 (217) | 53–69 | 70 (106) | 65–75 | 0.39 |
| Pathogenic sp. | |||||
| | 7 (25) | 3–11 | 3 (5) | 1–5 | 0.18 |
| | 11 (39) | 6–17 | 12 (18) | 8–16 | 0.89 |
| | 31 (110) | 24–39 | 23 (35) | 19–28 | 0.22 |
| | 7 (25) | 4–13 | 2 (3) | 1–3 | 0.06 |
| | 25 (89) | 20–29 | 23 (35) | 16–30 | 0.81 |
| Non-pathogenic sp. | |||||
| | 40 (142) | 32–49 | 53 (27) | 48–58 | 0.11 |
| | 35 (125) | 28–43 | 42 (63) | 37–47 | 0.39 |
a Confidence interval; b Infection with two or more parasites; c Infection with helminths only; d Infection with protozoa only; e Chi square test; f Number of children.
Intensity of helminth infections in eggs per gram of faeces in 116 schoolchildren by state.
| Sinaloa (n = 64) | Oaxaca (n = 52) | |
| Parasite | Arithmetic mean (interval confidence 95%) | |
| 8 (1.4–15) | 10 (1.5–20) | |
| 38 (6.6–70) | 7 (1–11) | |
| 54 (19–88) | 35 (11–58) | |
Socio-economic characteristics of 507 rural schoolchildren aged 6–10 years from 12 Mexican communities, 1997–2000.
| Characteristics | Sinaloa n = 356 | Oaxaca n = 151 | p value |
| Mother | |||
| Unemployed (%) | 65 (231)e | 59 (89)e | 0.59d |
| Employed (%) | 35 (125)e | 41 (62)e | 0.44d |
| Primary education in years | 5 (3.7)a (18)e | 4.5 (2.8)a (7)e | 0.79b |
| Father | |||
| Unemployed (%) | 9 (32)e | 10 (15)e | 0.88d |
| Employed (%) | 91(324)e | 90 (136)e | 0.99d |
| Primary education in years | 4.0 (3.5)a (14)e | 3.8 (3.2)a (6)e | 0.70b |
| Household conditions | |||
| Walls | |||
| Block/cement (%) | 67 (239)e | 31 (47)e | <0.0001d |
| Adobe (%) | 17 (61)e | 26 (39)e | |
| Bamboo/mud (%) | 12 (43)e | 24 (36)e | |
| Board laminate/wood (%) | 4 (14)e | 19 (29)e | |
| Roof | |||
| Concrete (%) | 80 (285)e | 13 (20)e | <0.0001d |
| Metal laminate/wood (%) | 16 (57)e | 83 (296)e | |
| Board laminate/wood (%) | 4 (14)e | 4 (14)e | |
| Floor | |||
| Bare-earth (%) | 37 (132)e | 47 (71)e | 0.20d |
| Cement (%) | 63 (224)e | 53 (80)e | 0.32d |
| Crowding indexc | 4 (14)e | 6 (9)e | 0.34b |
| Sanitation facilities | |||
| Defecation in Open Area (%) | 8 (29)e | 28 (42)e | <0.0001d |
| Pit (%) | 68 (242)e | 63 (95)e | |
| Latrine (%) | 24 (85)e | 9 (14)e | |
| Drinking water | |||
| Treated water (%) | 47 (167)e | 70 (106)e | <0.01d |
| Untreated water (%) | 53 (189)e | 30 (45)e | <0.01d |
| Family income | 4 times minimum daily wage | 1 minimum daily wage | <0.001b |
a Mean (standard deviation); b Student t-test; c Mean of number people per room; d Chi square test; e Frequency or number of individuals.
Association of socio-economic variables with intestinal parasitic infections in 507 schoolchildren aged 6–10 years old from Sinaloa (n = 356) and Oaxaca (n = 151).
| Socio-economic variables | n | OR* | 95%CI* |
| Family monthly income | |||
| >2 minimum daily wagea | 237 | 1.0 | |
| <2 minimum daily wage | 270 | 6.0 | 1.6–22.6 |
| Mother | |||
| Laboral activity | |||
| Employeda | 187 | 1.0 | |
| Unemployed | 320 | 4.5 | 2.5–8.2 |
| Primary education | |||
| Completea | 190 | 1.0 | |
| Incomplete | 317 | 3.3 | 1.5–7.4 |
| Defecation | |||
| Pit/latrinea | 436 | 1.0 | |
| Open area | 71 | 2.4 | 2.0–3.0 |
| Floor | |||
| Cementa | 304 | 1.0 | |
| Bare-earth | 203 | 0.9 | 0.6–1.3 |
| Gender | |||
| Malea | 274 | 1.0 | |
| Female | 233 | 0.7 | 0.5–1.0 |
| Age | 507 | 0.6 | 0.3–1.1 |
a Reference;*Multinomial logistic regression.
The socio-economic predictors of intestinal parasitic infections in 507 schoolchildren (6–10 years old) from 12 rural communities of two Mexican states.
| Socio-economic variables | Coefficient (standard error) | p* value |
| Family monthly income | 1.80 (0.66) | <0.001 |
| Mother unemployed | 1.5 (0.3) | <0.001 |
| Mother with incomplete primary school | 1.2 (0.4) | <0.001 |
| Defecation in open area | 0.90 (0.1) | <0.001 |
| Bare earth floor | -0.1 (0.2) | <0.001 |
| Crowding index | -0.30 (0.1) | <0.001 |
| Gender | -0.4 (0.2) | <0.001 |
| Age | -0.5 (0.3) | <0.01 |
*Multiple regression analysis (stepwise-backward elimination). Only significant regression coefficients (β) are shown. R2 = 0.78