| Literature DB >> 30123809 |
Karla Dzul-Rosado1, Cesar Lugo-Caballero1, Juan Jose Arias-Leon2, Freddy Pacheco-Tucuch1, Gaspar Peniche-Lara2, Jorge Zavala-Castro1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tick-borne diseases are caused by several pathogens whose transmission could be associated to the life conditions of communities settled in endemic areas. We aimed to determine the knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to the exposition and prevention of tick-borne diseases among people living in a typical Mayan community of Yucatan, Mexico between Dec 2012 and May 2013.Entities:
Keywords: Community knowledge; Prevention programs; Tick-borne diseases
Year: 2018 PMID: 30123809 PMCID: PMC6091802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Arthropod Borne Dis ISSN: 2322-1984 Impact factor: 1.198
General knowledge regarding ticks and its medical importance (n=212)
| Degree of importance of some infectious diseases | Dengue | 53 | 25.0 | |
| Influenza | 20 | 9.9 | ||
| Chagas’s disease | 13 | 6.13 | ||
| Tick-borne diseases (TBD) | 2 | 0.47 | ||
| Do not know | 124 | 58.5 | ||
| Can identify a tick | Yes | 209 | 98.5 | |
| No | 3 | 1.5 | ||
| Places where people have seen ticks | Inside the house | 52 | 24.5 | |
| In the milpa or the monte | 62 | 29.2 | ||
| They are unaware of ticks | 98 | 46.3 | ||
| Season of the year when their houses have been infested | During the dry season | 36 | 17.0 | |
| During the rainy season | 79 | 37.2 | ||
| The house has never been infested | 97 | 45.8 | ||
| Places in which they have been bitten | At their houses and peridomiciliary area | 13 | 6.1 | |
| At the milpa or the monte | 64 | 30.2 | ||
| Never have been bitten | 135 | 63.7 | ||
| Actions are taken when they find a wound or a tick attached to their bodies | Removal of the tick and no further action | 137 | 63.5 | |
| Use of home remedies | 75 | 36.5 | ||
| Seek for health assistance | 0 | 0 | ||
| Consequences of a tick bite | It can transmit an uncomplicated disease | 62 | 29.7 | |
| It can transmit a mortal disease | 28 | 13.2 | ||
| There are no consequences | 3 | 1.4 | ||
| Do not know | 119 | 55.7 | ||
| Actions were taken to reduce the risk of being bitten by ticks | Use of chemical agents against ticks on their yards | 14 | 6.6 | |
| Use of chemical agents on their dogs | 13 | 24.5 | ||
| People that bath their dogs on a regular basis | 52 | 6.1 | ||
| No measures | 133 | 62.8 |
Representative Field notes regarding the main topics explored during face to face interviews
| Mayan Names given to ticks | Peech (Tick), Sojol peech (Ticks living in the dead leaves), K’àak’ peech (Fire tick, red-colored ticks), Mejen peech (small size ticks), Buul tá peech (Ticks living on feces). | |
| Places where they have seen ticks | At the wall of the house, the kitchen and the poultry nests | |
| On animals like dogs or cattle | ||
| At the milpa (slang Mexican for agricultural fields) and the monte (slang Mexican for jungle) | ||
| At the firewood or corncobs brought from the milpa or the monte | ||
| On clothes of the people who work at the milpa or the monte | ||
| Season of the year when ticks are more abundant | October 4th which is the day of St Francis for Catholicism. During this time because St Francis blesses the seeds and brings the ticks attached to his ankle. | |
| During the rainy season (June-October) | ||
| During February and October | ||
| Whenever there is heat | ||
| Tick bites to the household members | I have been bitten on my back | |
| All my sons have been bitten several times | ||
| The peech has bitten my husband several times at the milpa | ||
| The children are bitten by ticks when they hug people who return from the milpa or the monte | ||
| Actions after the tick bite | I apply alcohol or Vaporub (a commercial ointment with alcanphor/menthol) | |
| I wash the wound with hot water, salt, and soap | ||
| I apply Denate (methomil powder used to kill ants) on the wound | ||
| I do nothing | ||
| Consequences of the tick bite | It can kill people | |
| The bite is only dangerous if the tick has bitten a snake before | ||
| It only makes you loose the appetite | ||
| It produces “aax” (warts, in Mayan language) | ||
| Nothing except for some itch | ||
| Strategies to avoid infestation by ticks | I bath my dog with Asunthol (coumaphos) | |
| I bath my dogs with chlorine, detergent and “blue soap” | ||
| I bath my dogs with “burned oil” (car oil already used and discarded) | ||
| I spread insecticide on my yard | ||
| I keep my dogs clean because they accompany me to the milpa |
Fig. 1.Habits and attitudes regarding ticks in Teabo, Yucatan, Mexico People