| Literature DB >> 18575621 |
Abstract
In the United States, there is a largely hidden burden of diseases caused by a group of chronic and debilitating parasitic, bacterial, and congenital infections known as the neglected infections of poverty. Like their neglected tropical disease counterparts in developing countries, the neglected infections of poverty in the US disproportionately affect impoverished and under-represented minority populations. The major neglected infections include the helminth infections, toxocariasis, strongyloidiasis, ascariasis, and cysticercosis; the intestinal protozoan infection trichomoniasis; some zoonotic bacterial infections, including leptospirosis; the vector-borne infections Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, trench fever, and dengue fever; and the congenital infections cytomegalovirus (CMV), toxoplasmosis, and syphilis. These diseases occur predominantly in people of color living in the Mississippi Delta and elsewhere in the American South, in disadvantaged urban areas, and in the US-Mexico borderlands, as well as in certain immigrant populations and disadvantaged white populations living in Appalachia. Preliminary disease burden estimates of the neglected infections of poverty indicate that tens of thousands, or in some cases, hundreds of thousands of poor Americans harbor these chronic infections, which represent some of the greatest health disparities in the United States. Specific policy recommendations include active surveillance (including newborn screening) to ascertain accurate population-based estimates of disease burden; epidemiological studies to determine the extent of autochthonous transmission of Chagas disease and other infections; mass or targeted treatments; vector control; and research and development for new control tools including improved diagnostics and accelerated development of a vaccine to prevent congenital CMV infection and congenital toxoplasmosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18575621 PMCID: PMC2430531 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Selected US Census Bureau 2006 Poverty Data.
| Category | Poverty Rate | Reference |
| Official poverty rate | 12.3% |
|
| Non-Hispanic white | 8.2% |
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| Non-Hispanic black | 24.3% |
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| Hispanic | 20.6% |
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| Children under age 18 y | 17.4% |
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| Black female householder, no husband present, with children under age 18 y | 43.6% |
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| Hispanic female householder, no husband present, with children under age 18 y | 42.5% |
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Figure 1Location of Counties That Represent Spatial Clusters in Which Poverty Rates Are at Least Two Standard Deviations Higher Than the National Mean.
Top: Counties south of the Continental Divide. Bottom: Counties north of the Continental Divide. From Holt [12].
Estimated Prevalence of Neglected Infections of Poverty in the US.
| Neglected Disease Category | Disease | Estimated Number of Cases | Major Regions or Populations at Risk | References |
|
| Ascariasis | <4 million | Appalachia, American South |
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| Toxocariasis | 1.3–2.8 million | Inner cities, American South, Appalachia |
| |
| Strongyloidiasis | 68,000–100,000 | Appalachia, African refugees |
| |
| Trichinellosis | 16 (insufficient data) | Arctic Alaska |
| |
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| Cysticercosis | 41,400–169,000 | US–Mexico borderlands |
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| Schistosomiasis | 8,000 | African refugees |
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| Echinococcosis | Insufficient data | Tribal Lands and Arctic Alaska | — | |
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| Giardiasis | 2.0–2.5 million | All regions |
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| Trichomoniasis | 880,000 (black women) | American South, inner cities |
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| Cryptosporidiosis | 300,000 | All regions |
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| Chagas disease | 3,000 to >1 million | US–Mexico borderlands, American South |
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| Cyclosporiasis | 16,624 | All regions |
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| Congenital toxoplasmosis | ≤4,000 annually | American South, inner cities, US–Mexico borderlands, Arctic Alaska |
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| Leishmaniasis | Insufficient data | US–Mexico borderlands | — | |
| Amebiasis | Insufficient data | US–Mexico borderlands | — | |
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| Congenital syphilis | 1,528 between 2000 and 2002 | American South, inner cities |
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| Brucellosis | 1,554 | US–Mexico borderlands |
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| Bovine tuberculosis | 129 cases between 1994 and 2000 | US–Mexico borderlands |
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| Leprosy | 166 | US–Mexico borderlands |
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| Trench fever | Insufficient data | Inner cities | — | |
| Leptospirosis | Insufficient data | Inner cities | — | |
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| Dengue fever | 110,000–200,000 new infections annually | US–Mexico borderlands, American South |
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| Congenital CMV | 27,002 annually; 6,652 in blacks; 4,196 in Hispanics | American South, inner cities |
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| Human rabies | 2 | All regions |
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Priority Needs for Enhanced Surveillance, Treatment, and Prevention Efforts for the High Priority Neglected Infections of Poverty.
| Disease Category | Disease | Expanded Active Surveillance and Treatment | Newborn Screening and Treatment | Epidemiological Transmission Studies | New Diagnostics | New Drugs | New Vaccines |
|
| Ascariasis | + | + | ||||
| Toxocariasis | + | + | + | ||||
| Strongyloidiasis | + | + | + | ||||
| Cysticercosis | + | + | + | + | |||
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| Giardiasis | + | |||||
| Cryptosporidiosis | + | + | + | ||||
| Trichomoniasis | + | ||||||
| Chagas disease | + | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Leishmaniasis | + | + | + | + | |||
| Congenital toxoplasmosis | + | + | + | + | + | + | |
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| Congenital syphilis | + | + | ||||
| Brucellosis | + | + | |||||
| Bovine tuberculosis | + | + | |||||
| Trench fever | + | + | |||||
| Leptospirosis | + | + | |||||
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| Dengue fever | + | + | + | + | ||
| Congenital CMV | + | + | + | + | + |