| Literature DB >> 22106747 |
Rita Mukherjee1, Debasish Halder, Subhasish Saha, Rudra Shyamali, Chakrabarti Subhranshu, R Ramakrishnan, Manoj V Murhekar, Yvan J Hutin.
Abstract
In rural West Bengal, outbreaks of cholera are often centred around ponds that is a feature of the environment. Five investigations of laboratory-confirmed, pond-centred outbreaks of cholera were reviewed. Case-control odds ratios were approximated with relative risks (RRs) as the incidence was low. The environment was investigated to understand how the pond(s) could have become contaminated and could have infected villagers. The five outbreaks of cholera in 2004-2008 led to 277 cases and three deaths (median attack rate: 51/1,000 people; case fatality: 1.1%; median age of case-patients: 22 years; median duration: 13 days, range: 6-15 days). Factors significantly (p<0.05) associated with cholera in the case-control (n=4) and cohort investigations (n=1) included washing utensils in ponds (4 outbreaks of cholera, RR range: 6-12), bathing (3 outbreaks of cholera, RR range: 3.5-9.3), and exposure to pond water, including drinking (2 outbreaks of cholera, RR range: 2.1-3.2), mouth washing (1 outbreak of cholera, RR: 4.8), and cooking (1 outbreak of cholera, RR: 3.0). Initial case-patients contaminated ponds through washing soiled clothes (n=4) or defaecation (n=1). Ubiquitous ponds used for many purposes transmit cholera in West Bengal. Focused health education, hygiene, and sanitation must protect villagers, particularly following the occurrence of an index case in a village that has ponds.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22106747 PMCID: PMC3225103 DOI: 10.3329/jhpn.v29i5.8895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Fig. 1.Example of clustering of cholera cases around a pond, Pipulhat village, West Bengal, 2006 (outbreak no. 4)
Fig. 2.Example of clustering of cholera cases around ponds, Kachua village, West Bengal, 2004 (outbreak no. 1)
Fig. 3.Example of point-source outbreak on an epidemic curve showing the distribution of cases by date of onset, Sonakhali village, West Bengal, 2006 (outbreak no. 2)
Main epidemiological findings for pond-centred cholera outbreaks, FETP, West Bengal, India, 2004-2008
| Background information | No. (year) | 1 (2004) | 2 (2006) | 3 (2007) | 4 (2007) | 5 (2008) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Setting | Rural | Urban slum | Rural | Rural | Rural | |
| District | South 24 Paraganas | South 24 Paraganas | South 24 Paraganas | Howrah | Nadia | |
| Magnitude and severity | No. of cases | 55 | 56 | 32 | 63 | 71 |
| Rate per 1,000 | 42 | 121 | 51 | 22 | 77 | |
| deaths/case fatality | 2 (3.6%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (3.1%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Descriptive epidemiology | Median age (years) | 18 | 24 | 22 | 30 | 20 |
| % of females | 50 | 55 | 50 | 54 | 59 | |
| Duration (days) | 11 | 6 | 11 | 15 | 13 | |
| No. of modes on epidemic curve | 1 (common source) | 1 (point source) | 1 (common source) | 2 (common source) | 1 (common source) | |
| No. of ponds | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
| Analytical epidemiology methods | Case control | Retrospective cohort | Case control | Case control | Case control | |
| Relative risk /odds ratio (95% CI) | Washing utensils | N/A | 12 (4.8-31) | 10 (7.0-13) | 9.3 (2.8-31) | 6 (2.3-15) |
| Swallowing water | 8.3 (2.4-35) | N/A | 3.5 (1.2-10) | 1.3 (0.6-2.8) | 9.3 (3.3-26) | |
| Washing mouth | N/A | N/A | N/A | 1.81 (0.9-3.8) | 4.8 (1.8-13) | |
| Drinking-water | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2.1 (0.9-4.7) | 3.2 (1.3-8.2) | |
| Cooking with water | N/A | N/A | N/A | 3.0 (1.3-7.1) | 0.78 (0.4-1.6) |
NA=Not available;
CI=Confidence interval;
FETP=Field Epidemiology Training Programme
Prevalence of practices among surveyed population residing in a 50-metre radius of ponds in Nadia district, West Bengal, 2008 (n=594)
| Category | Practice | No. | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Behaviours that could contaminate the pond | Disposed children excreta in pond | 496 | 84 |
| Washed soiled clothes of a sick person in pond | 516 | 87 | |
| Had sewerage line draining directly into pond | 339 | 57 | |
| Washed body parts in pond after defaecation | 219 | 37 | |
| Behaviours that could lead to infection of human from pond water | Washed utensils in pond | 502 | 85 |
| Washed mouth with pond water | 439 | 74 | |
| Swallowed water during bathing | 438 | 74 | |
| Cooked with pond water | 380 | 64 | |
| Drank pond water | 108 | 18 |