Author:
AL-SHAMAHY H. A.,WHITTY C. J. M.,WRIGHT S. G.
Abstract
Brucellosis is known to occur in Yemen but its epidemiology has not been extensively studied.
The present investigation examined risk factors for human brucellosis in Yemen using a
hospital-based case-control study. A total of 235 consecutive patients with brucellosis attending
the Central Health Laboratory in Sana’a, Yemen, were matched in respect of age, sex, and
place of residence, rural or urban, with 234 controls selected from individuals attending the
Central Health Laboratory for unrelated health problems. Clinical information on patients and
controls was supplemented with occupational and socio-economic data obtained by interview
of cases and controls using a standard questionnaire.After controlling for confounding factors significant risk factors for infection related to
occupation as a farmer (OR 2·5 (95% CI 1·4–4·5, P < 0·0001)),
shepherd (OR 7·8 (95% CI 1·0–61, P 0·05)) or microbiologist
(OR 24·5 (95% CI 2·9–204, P 0·003)); and drinking fresh
milk (OR 2·0 (95% CI 1·3–4·3, P 0·001)) and laban
(OR 22·7 (95% CI 1·7–4·2 P < 0·0001)).
Taking other milk products and offal were not risk factors. Socio-economic and educational
factors were also independent risk factors. Occupational, food and socio-economic risk factors
significantly confounded one another.Yemen shares some but not all of the risk factors of neighbouring countries. The interrelation
between the various factors is complex and studying any one in isolation may give a
false impression of its public health significance. Control through education of the population
to minimize exposure to, and contact with, animals and their milk and milk products and to
boil milk before drinking it or using it to make buttermilk, would be difficult as these would
represent such fundamental changes to established patterns of behaviour of this society. Ideally
there would be a campaign to control the infection by animal vaccination but the costs and
logistic difficulty would be great. Presently there is a clear need for doctors in Yemen to be
made aware of the frequency of this infection, the means available for clinical and laboratory
diagnosis and effective treatment, while strategies to control the disease in Yemen are
formulated and field tested.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
56 articles.
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