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A study of typhoid fever in five asian countries: disease burden and implications for controls

Authors :
R Leon Ochiai
Camilo J Acosta
M Carolina Danovaro-Holliday
Dong Baiqing
Sujit K Bhattacharya
Magdarina D Agtini
Zulfiqar A Bhutta
Do Gia Canh
Mohammad Ali
Seonghye Shin
John Wain
Anne-Laure Page
M John Albert
Jeremy Farrar
Remon Abu-Elyazeed
Tikki Pang
Claudia M Galindo
Lorenz von Seidlein
John D Clemens
Source :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization, Vol 86, Iss 4, Pp 260-268 (2008)
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
The World Health Organization, 2008.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To inform policy-makers about introduction of preventive interventions against typhoid, including vaccination. METHODS: A population-based prospective surveillance design was used. Study sites where typhoid was considered a problem by local authorities were established in China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan and Viet Nam. Standardized clinical, laboratory, and surveillance methods were used to investigate cases of fever of > 3 days' duration for a one-year period. A total of 441 435 persons were under surveillance, 159 856 of whom were aged 5-15 years. FINDINGS: A total of 21 874 episodes of fever were detected. Salmonella typhi was isolated from 475 (2%) blood cultures, 57% (273/475) of which were from 5-15 year-olds. The annual typhoid incidence (per 100 000 person years) among this age group varied from 24.2 and 29.3 in sites in Viet Nam and China, respectively, to 180.3 in the site in Indonesia; and to 412.9 and 493.5 in sites in Pakistan and India, respectively. Altogether, 23% (96/413) of isolates were multidrug resistant (chloramphenicol, ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole). CONCLUSION: The incidence of typhoid varied substantially between sites, being high in India and Pakistan, intermediate in Indonesia, and low in China and Viet Nam. These findings highlight the considerable, but geographically heterogeneous, burden of typhoid fever in endemic areas of Asia, and underscore the importance of evidence on disease burden in making policy decisions about interventions to control this disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00429686
Volume :
86
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.74f58b0e8c649d7ae47aae437ce8b99
Document Type :
article