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Spatial analysis of congenital syphilis in a federative unit in northeastern Brazil

Authors :
Francisca Jacinta Feitoza de Oliveira
Roberta de Araújo e Silva
Marcelino Santos Neto
Floriacy Stabnow Santos
Hanari Santos de Almeida Tavares
Sheila Cristina Teixeira Fonseca
Volmar Morais Fontoura
Ismália Cassandra Costa Maia Dias
Marcela de Oliveira Feitosa
Leonardo Hunaldo dos Santos
Janaina Miranda Bezerra
Arissane de Sousa Falcão
Lílian Natália Ferreira de Lima
Valckinara Carreiro Lima
Iolanda Graepp Fontoura
Ana Cristina Pereira de Jesus Costa
Source :
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 115(10)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Congenital syphilis is an infectious disease that affects 1 million children a year worldwide. Methods The objective of this study was to describe a spatial analysis of the epidemiological characteristics of congenital syphilis in the state of Maranhão, Brazil from 2007 to 2018. This was an ecological study using data obtained in May 2020 from three Brazilian information systems. The spatial correlation was analyzed according to local and global Moran indexes. Results During the 12-y period, 1 426 177 children were born. Of these children, 3684 acquired congenital syphilis (0.26%; mean annual rate of 2.62/1000 live births) and 70 died (1.90%; mean annual rate 0.05). The clusters were statistically significant according to the global Moran index of 0.40 (p=0.01). Spearman's correlation coefficient between the rate of detection of syphilis in pregnant women and family health strategy teams was strong, positive and significant (ρ=0.73; p Conclusions The use of spatial analysis tools have made it possible to detect areas with both a greater and a lesser need for intervention, and to more effectively improve and monitor those areas to change the epidemiological profile of the disease.

Details

ISSN :
18783503
Volume :
115
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a0d9f9f29d88a3ddf1ed21ad67e55dee