Author:
GUYATT H. L.,BROOKER S.,DONNELLY C. A.
Abstract
Community data on the prevalence of helminth infections is important
for guiding health policy, but expensive to collect.
As a result most surveys focus on school-aged children, frequently using
schools as a sentinel population. Since there
already exists a vast amount of data on infection levels in school-aged
children, but limited community-based data, we
undertook a literature search on age-stratified infection data for intestinal
nematode infections and schistosomiasis in
Africa, to investigate whether estimates of the prevalence of infection
in school-aged children could provide an index for
determining community prevalence. The observed data on prevalence of infection
in infants, school-aged children and
adults were fitted using linear and logistic regression models which take
into account variation in sample prevalences.
Despite the wide variation in study sites, the observed relationship between
community prevalence and school-aged
prevalence was remarkably consistent for each parasite species. The prevalence
of infection in school-aged children alone
was shown to be higher than the predicted prevalence in the community,
but the degree of overestimation was dependent
on the parasite species and the level of infection. The results suggest
that the prevalence of infection in school-aged children
could provide a cost-effective predictive tool which can be used at a district/national
level to identify target areas for
control and to evaluate the numbers at risk of infection.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
29 articles.
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