| Literature DB >> 30380650 |
Wendemagegn Enbiale1, Ashenafi Ayalew2.
Abstract
The impact of the severe drought in Ethiopia, attributed to El Niño weather conditions, has led to high levels of malnutrition that have, in turn, increased the potential for disease outbreaks. In 2015, Ethiopia faced a scabies outbreak in drought-affected areas where there was a shortage of safe water for drinking and personal hygiene. Following a house-to-house census to assess the prevalence of scabies, a detailed study was conducted looking at the disease burden. Following the outbreak report, training was provided on scabies identification and management for zonal and district health officials from administrative districts affected by the drought (nutritional hot-spot woredas). The training was cascaded down to the health extension workers in the affected areas. Screening and management guidelines and protocols were also distributed. House-to-house data collection was undertaken by 450 health extension workers (HEWs) to assess the prevalence of scabies. The HEWs used a simplified reporting tool. Subsequently, data were collected and validated in two zones and six woredas from 474 participants who had been diagnosed with scabies using a standardized questionnaire. This was designed to look at the specificity of the diagnosis of scabies, age distribution, severity, duration of illness, secondary infection and other sociodemographic variables as preparation for mass drug administration (MDA). The HEWs screened 1,125,770 people in the 68 districts in Amhara Region and a total of 379,000 confirmed cases of scabies was identified. The prevalence in the different districts ranged from 2% to 67% and the median was 33.5% [interquartile range (IQR) 19⁻48%]. 49% of cases were school-aged children. The detailed study of 474 individuals who were recorded as scabies cases revealed that the specificity of the diagnosis of scabies by the HEWs was 98.3%. The mean duration of illness was 5 months (SD of ± 2.8). One third of patients were recorded as having severe illness, 75.1% of cases had affected family members, and 30% of affected children were noted to have secondary bacterial infection. Eleven percent of the students had discontinued school due to scabies or/and drought and 85% of these had secondary bacterial infection. These community-based data serve as reliable proxy indicators for community-based burden assessment of the scabies epidemic. This study will also provide a good basis for advocating the use of a community-level clinical diagnostic scheme for scabies using an algorithm with a simple combination of signs and symptoms in resource-poor settings.Entities:
Keywords: drought; emergency state; outbreak; scabies
Year: 2018 PMID: 30380650 PMCID: PMC6306922 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed3040114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Figure 1Amhara regional State, Ethiopia (2015/2016).
Clinical case definition of scabies and contact [7].
| Presence of itching with typical lesions on hands, inter-digital, and/or genitalia and/or itching and close contact with an individual who has itching or typical lesions in a typical distribution. | |
| A contact is a person who does not fulfill the clinical criteria for infestation with scabies (above) or a person without signs and symptoms consistent with scabies, who has had direct contact (particularly prolonged, direct, skin-to-skin contact) with a suspected or confirmed case in the two months preceding the onset of scabies signs and symptoms in the index case |
Figure 2Scabies distribution in in Amhara Region, Ethiopia (2015–2016).
Prevalence of scabies and bivariate analysis of demographic factors based on a house-to-house census in Amhara Region, Ethiopia (October 2015).
| Variable | Total ( | Affected ( | Prevalence | OR * | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||||
| Female | 585,400 | 195,665 | 33.4 | Ref | Ref |
| Male | 540,370 | 183,335 | 33.9 | 1.05 | 0.8 |
| Total | 1,125,770 | 379,000 | 33.7 | ||
| Age group (years) ** | |||||
| <2 | 60,792 | 27,909 | 45.9 | 2.5 | 0.01 |
| 2 to 18 | 518,980 | 249,535 | 48.1 | 2.4 | 0.01 |
| >18 | 545,998 | 101,556 | 18.6 |
* Odds Ratio. ** Age groups were defined as follows: <2 years, 2 to 18 years, >18 years.
Figure 3(A) Extensive crusting papules, excoriation with post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation in a 34-year-old female. (B) Pustules, crusts, and erosion in 12-year-old boy. (C) Pustules, crusts, and erosions in a 2-year-old female.
Clinical signs and symptoms of scabies cases in the Amhara region, Ethiopia (2015).
| Variables | |
|---|---|
| Itching | 466 (100%) |
| Classic scabies lesion | 466 (100%) |
| Bacterial infection | 116 (25%) |
| Crusted scabies | 14 (3%) |
| Mild | 13 (28%) |
| Moderate | 191 (41%) |
| Severe | 144 (31%) |
Scabies secondary bacterial infection rate by age, Amhara region, Ethiopia (2015).
| Variable | Scabies Cases ( | Infection ( | Infection % (95% CI) | Odds Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <2 years | 46 | 7 | 15.2 (11.8–18.2) | 1.8 | 0.012 |
| 2–18 years | 288 | 101 | 35.1 (29.3–40.9) | 4.2 | <0.001 |
| >18 years | 132 | 11 | 8.3 (6.9–9.7) | Ref. | |
| Total | 466 | 119 | 25.5 (21.3–29.7) |