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Cross-sectional Study of the Burden of Vector-Borne and Soil-Transmitted Polyparasitism in Rural Communities of Coast Province, Kenya

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Last modified
  • 02/20/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Donal Bisanzio, Emory UniversityFrancis Mutuku, Emory UniversityAmaya L. Bustinduy, Liverpool School of Tropical MedicinePeter L. Mungai, Case Western Reserve UniversityEric M. Muchiri, Ministry of Public Health and SanitationCharles H. King, Case Western Reserve UniversityUriel Kitron, Emory University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2014-07
Publisher
  • Public Library of Science
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • © 2014 Bisanzio et al.
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
ISSN
  • 1935-2727
Volume
  • 8
Issue
  • 7
Start Page
  • e2992
End Page
  • e2992
Grant/Funding Information
  • This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Research Grant R01TW008067 funded by the Ecology of Infectious Diseases Program through the Fogarty International Center.
Supplemental Material (URL)
Abstract
  • Background: In coastal Kenya, infection of human populations by a variety of parasites often results in co-infection or poly-parasitism. These parasitic infections, separately and in conjunction, are a major cause of chronic clinical and sub-clinical human disease and exert a long-term toll on economic welfare of affected populations. Risk factors for these infections are often shared and overlap in space, resulting in interrelated patterns of transmission that need to be considered at different spatial scales. Integration of novel quantitative tools and qualitative approaches is needed to analyze transmission dynamics and design effective interventions. Methodology: Our study was focused on detecting spatial and demographic patterns of single- and co-infection in six villages in coastal Kenya. Individual and household level data were acquired using cross-sectional, socio-economic, and entomological surveys. Generalized additive models (GAMs and GAMMs) were applied to determine risk factors for infection and co-infections. Spatial analysis techniques were used to detect local clusters of single and multiple infections. Principal findings: Of the 5,713 tested individuals, more than 50% were infected with at least one parasite and nearly 20% showed co-infections. Infections with Schistosoma haematobium (26.0%) and hookworm (21.4%) were most common, as was co-infection by both (6.3%). Single and co-infections shared similar environmental and socio-demographic risk factors. The prevalence of single and multiple infections was heterogeneous among and within communities. Clusters of single and co-infections were detected in each village, often spatially overlapped, and were associated with lower SES and household crowding. Conclusion: Parasitic infections and co-infections are widespread in coastal Kenya, and their distributions are heterogeneous across landscapes, but inter-related. We highlighted how shared risk factors are associated with high prevalence of single infections and can result in spatial clustering of co-infections. Spatial heterogeneity and synergistic risk factors for polyparasitism need to be considered when designing surveillance and intervention strategies.
Author Notes
  • Corresponding author: Donal Bisanzio, Department of Environmental Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America. Email: dbisanz@emory.edu.
Research Categories
  • Environmental Sciences
  • Health Sciences, Public Health

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