Soil-Transmitted Helminthiasis in Children from a Rural Community Taking Part in a Periodic Deworming Program in the Peruvian Amazon

Male Rural Population age distribution Helminthiasis Feces Soil 0302 clinical medicine Risk Factors Peruvian Peru environmental sanitation Prevalence Sanitation Child helminth Anthelmintics child parasite transmission mother smear school health service Articles 3. Good health soil microflora Mebendazole female health care policy Child, Preschool Female hookworm sedimentation total quality management Adolescent https://purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.06 helminthiasis prevalence Mothers KATO III cell line Article mebendazole 03 medical and health sciences male feces analysis Animals Humans controlled study human rural population Ascaris lumbricoides Trichuris trichiura screening test personal hygiene school child major clinical study Cross-Sectional Studies adolescent Strongyloides stercoralis
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.18-1011 Publication Date: 2019-07-16T07:01:05Z
ABSTRACT
Children in the Peruvian Amazon Basin are at risk of soil-transmitted helminths (STH) infections. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of STH infection in children from a rural Amazonian community of Peru and to elucidate epidemiological risk factors associated with its perpetuation while on a school-based deworming program with mebendazole. Stool samples of children aged 2–14 years and their mothers were analyzed through direct smear analysis, Kato–Katz, spontaneous sedimentation in tube, Baermann’s method, and agar plate culture. A questionnaire was administered to collect epidemiological information of interest. Among 124 children, 25.8% had one or more STH. Individual prevalence rates were as follows: Ascaris lumbricoides, 16.1%; Strongyloides stercoralis, 10.5%; hookworm, 1.6%; and Trichuris trichiura, (1.6%). The prevalence of common STH (A. lumbricoides, T. trichiura, and hookworm) was higher among children aged 2–5 years than older children (31.6% versus 12.8%; P = 0.01). In terms of sanitation deficits, walking barefoot was significantly associated with STH infection (OR = 3.28; CI 95% = 1.11–12.07). Furthermore, STH-infected children more frequently had a mother who was concomitantly infected by STH than the non-STH–infected counterpart (36.4% versus 14.1%, P = 0.02). In conclusion, STH infection is highly prevalent in children from this Amazonian community despite routine deworming. Institutional health policies may include hygiene and sanitation improvements and screening/deworming of mothers to limit the dissemination of STH. Further studies are needed to address the social and epidemiological mechanics perpetuating these infections.
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