Author:
LUBY S. P.,FAIZAN M. K.,FISHER-HOCH S. P.,SYED A.,MINTZ E. D.,BHUTTA Z. A.,MCCORMICK J. B.
Abstract
We conducted a study to evaluate risk factors for developing typhoid
fever in a setting where
the disease is endemic in Karachi, Pakistan. We enrolled 100 cases with
blood
culture-confirmed Salmonella typhi between July and October 1994
and 200 age-matched
neighbourhood controls. Cases had a median age of 5·8 years. In
a conditional logistic
regression model, eating ice cream (Odds ratio [OR]=2·3;
95% confidence interval [CI]
1·2–4·2, attributable risk [AR]=36%),
eating food from a roadside cabin during the summer
months (OR=4·6, 95% CI 1·6–13·0; AR=18%),
taking antimicrobials in the 2 weeks
preceding the onset of symptoms (OR=5·7, 95% CI
2·3–13·9, AR=21%), and drinking
water at the work-site (OR=44·0, 95% CI 2·8–680,
AR=8%) were all independently
associated with typhoid fever. There was no difference in the microbiological
water quality of
home drinking water between cases and controls. Typhoid fever in Karachi
resulted from
high-dose exposures from multiple sources with individual susceptibility
increased by young age and
prior antimicrobial use. Improving commercial food hygiene and decreasing
unnecessary
antimicrobial use would be expected to decrease the burden of typhoid fever.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
84 articles.
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