| Literature DB >> 21087520 |
Suneth B Agampodi1, Dhanaseela B Nugegoda, Vasanthi Thevanesam.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leptospirosis is becoming a major public health threat in Sri Lanka as well as in other countries. We designed a case control study to determine the factors associated with local transmission of leptospirosis in Sri Lanka, in order to identify major modifiable determinants of leptospirosis. The purpose of this paper is to describe the study protocol in detail prior to the publishing of the study results, so that the readership will be able to understand and interpret the study results effectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21087520 PMCID: PMC2994874 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-10-332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Risk factors for human leptospirosis based on case control studies
| Authors | Country | Study | Sample size | Risk factors | Odds ratio(CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Douglin et al (1997) | St. Andrew Barbados | Laboratory based retrospective | Cases 22 | Gardening | 4.57(1.09-20.36) |
| Con. 38 | presence of dogs around the home | 7.82(1.79-46.55) | |||
| wearing boots in the garden or yard | 8.59(1.93-42.55) | ||||
| walking through ponds or stagnant water | 25.62(2.89-1151.84) | ||||
| Bovet et al (1999) | Seychellus | Population based prospective | Cases 75 | Gardening | 9.86 (2.6-36.1) |
| Con. 65 | Indoor occupation | 0.28 (0.09-0.85) | |||
| Home built with corrugated iron | 4.6 (1.09-19.4) | ||||
| Wet soil around home | 5.65 (1.39-23) | ||||
| Refuse not collected by public service | 5.23 (1.37-20) | ||||
| Cats at home | 7.55 (2.04-27.9) | ||||
| Skin wounds | 6.66 (2.04-27.9) | ||||
| Drinking locally made brew | 5.41 (1.38-21.2) | ||||
| Leal-Castellanos et al (2003) | Chiapas, Mexico | Rural community prevalence study | 1169 subjects | skin cut or abrasion | 4.2 (3.1-5.7) |
| contact with animal excreta with no | 1.9 (1.3-2.7) | ||||
| protection and with a skin cut or abrasion | 2.3 (1.1-4.6) | ||||
| Phraisuwan et al (2002) | Thailand | High risk exposure - after pond cleaning | Cases 43 | wearing long pants or skirts | 0.217 |
| Con. 61 | presence of more than two wounds on the body | 3.97 | |||
| Ashford et al (2000) | Nicaragua | High risk exposure Following an Outbreak | Case 85 | Rural household | 2.61 (1.06-6.45) |
| Con. 481 | Gathering wood | 2.08 (1.14-3.79) | |||
| Shelling/husking corn | 1.8 (0.72-4.51) | ||||
| Indoor water source | 0.42 (0.22-0.80) | ||||
| Everard et al | Barbados | Laboratory based retrospective | Sugar-cane workers | 5 | |
| (1990) | those whose families minded livestock | 2.5 | |||
| rodents in their garden/yard | 1.8 | ||||
| Johnson et al (2004) | Peru | Endemic area seroprevalence | Case 235 | Not wearing shoes in the field | 2.17 (1.39-3.37) |
| Tangkanakul et al (2000) | North- eastern, Thailand | Hospital based Prospective | Case 56 | travel on potholed roads | 5.0 ( 1.2-20.2) |
| Con. 145 | traveling by car | 0.2 ( 0.06-0.9) | |||
| Sarkar et al (2002) | Salvador, Brazil | During an epidemic retrospective population based | Case 101 | Open sewer in proximity | 5.07 (2.04-12.64) |
| Con. 125 | Open sewer floods during rainy season | 4.21 (1.51-12.83) | |||
| Street floods during rainy season | 2.54 (1.08-6.17) | ||||
| > 6 h/day outdoors | 2.42 (1.16-5.00) | ||||
| Contact with sewer water | 3.63 (1.69-7.25) | ||||
| Contact with floodwater | 3.03 (1.44-6.39) | ||||
| Contact with mud | 3.08 (1.32-5.87) | ||||
| Sighting groups of five or more rats | 5.00 (2.22-21.25) | ||||
| Peri-domiciliar sighting of rats Sighting | 3.40 (1.74-11.78) | ||||
| Sighting rats at work site | 2.40 (1.11-5.17) | ||||
| Dog as domestic animal | 1.19 (0.57-2.47) | ||||
| Works > 40 h/week | 1.72 (0.89-3.66) | ||||
| Works outdoors exclusively | 2.46 (1.04-5.11) | ||||
| Work-related contact with trash | 2.36 (1.23-5.56) | ||||
| Nardone et al (1998) | Metropolitan France | Retrospective, hospital-based | Case 90 | Skin lesion | 7.0 (2.7-17.6) |
| Con. 169 | Countryside residence | 2.9 (1.1-7.6) | |||
| Canoeing | 15.5 (1.6-147.0) | ||||
| Any animal contact | 4.8 (1.4-16.2) |
Figure 1Map of Sri Lanka showing the study area.
Selected demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the study settings
| Kandy | Kegalle | Matale | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total population | 1,279,028 | 785,524 | 441,328 |
| Land area (km2) | 1,940 | 1,693 | 1,993 |
| Crude birth rate (per 1000 population) | 22.4 | 11.5 | 16.7 |
| Crude death rate (per 1000 population) | 6.6 | 5.8 | 5 |
| Median per capita income (Rupees) | 16,203 | 13,114 | 14,119 |
| Paddy harvested area (hectares) | 30,752 | 25,070 | 14,598 |
Figure 2Hierarchical framework of probable determinants of leptospirosis.