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Reassessment of the prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infections in Sri Lanka to enable a more focused control programme: a cross-sectional national school survey with spatial modelling

Authors :
Ediriweera, D.S.
Gunawardena, S.
Gunawardena, N.K.
Iddawela, D.
Kannathasan, S.
Murugananthan, A.
Yahathugoda, C.
Pathmeswaran, A.
Diggle, P.J.
de Silva, N.
Ediriweera, D.S.
Gunawardena, S.
Gunawardena, N.K.
Iddawela, D.
Kannathasan, S.
Murugananthan, A.
Yahathugoda, C.
Pathmeswaran, A.
Diggle, P.J.
de Silva, N.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In Sri Lanka, deworming programmes for soil-transmitted helminth infections became an integral part of school health in the 1960s, whereas routine antenatal deworming with mebendazole started in the 1980s. A 2003 national soil-transmitted helminth survey done among schoolchildren found an overall prevalence of 6·9%. In our study, we aimed to reassess the national prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infections to enable implementation of a more focused control programme that targets smaller administrative areas at risk of continued transmission. METHODS: We did a cross-sectional, school-based, national survey using multistage stratified cluster sampling, covering all nine provinces as well as populations at high risk of soil-transmitted helminth infections living in urban slums and in plantation-sector communities. Our study population was children aged 5-7 years attending state schools. Faecal samples were collected and analysed with duplicate modified Kato-Katz smears. We modelled the risk of soil-transmitted helminth infection using generalised linear mixed-effects models, and we developed prevalence maps to enable informed decision making at the smallest health administrative level in the country. FINDINGS: Between Jan 23 and May 9, 2017, we recruited 5946 children from 130 schools; 4276 (71·9%) children provided a faecal sample for examination. National prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infection was 0·97% (95% CI 0·63-1·48) among primary schoolchildren. Prevalence in the high-risk communities surveyed was higher than national prevalence: 2·73% (0·75-6·87) in urban slum communities and 9·02% (4·29-18·0) in plantation sector communities. Our prevalence maps showed that the lowest-level health administrative regions could be categorised into low risk (prevalence <1%), high risk (prevalence >10%), or intermediate risk (1-10%) areas. INTERPRETATION: Our survey findings indicate that the national prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infection

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Ediriweera, D.S. and Gunawardena, S. and Gunawardena, N.K. and Iddawela, D. and Kannathasan, S. and Murugananthan, A. and Yahathugoda, C. and Pathmeswaran, A. and Diggle, P.J. and de Silva, N. (2019) Reassessment of the prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infections in Sri Lanka to enable a more focused control programme: a cross-sectional national school survey with spatial modelling. Lancet Global Health, 7 (9). e1237-e1246. ISSN 2214-109X
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1425736297
Document Type :
Electronic Resource