Environmental aspects related to tuberculosis and intestinal parasites in a low-income community of the Brazilian Amazon

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Cardoso, Biatriz Araújo
Fonseca, Fabio de Oliveria
Moraes Neto, Antonio Henrique Almeida de
Martins, Ana Caroline Guedes Souza
Oliveira, Nissa Vilhena da Silva
Lima, Luana Nepomuceno Gondim Costa
Dias, George Alberto da Silva
Saad, Maria Helena Féres
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-abstract
We carried out a cross-sectional study from January to December 2015 on 1,425
inhabitants from a floating population in the Brazilian Amazon (Murinin district, Pará State)
to describe the population-based prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) from 2011 to 2014, recent
TB contacts (rCts) latently infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (LTBI), the coverage
of the local health network, socio-environmental factors, and frequency of intestinal parasitic
infection (IPI). We found that the sanitary structure was inadequate, with latrines being shared
with other rooms within the same accommodation; well water was the main source of water,
and 48% of families had low incomes. The average rate of TB was 105/100, 000 inhabitants per
year; one third of TB patients had been household contacts of infected individuals in the past,
and 23% of rCts were LTBI. More than half (65%) of 44% of the stools examined (representing
76% of the housing) had IPIs; the highest prevalence was of fecal-oral transmitted protozoa
(40%, Giardia intestinalis), followed by soil-transmitted helminths (23%). TB transmission
may be related to insufficient disease control of rCts, frequent relocation, and underreporting.
Education, adopting hygienic habits, improving sanitation, provision of a treated water supply
and efficient sewage system, further comprehensive epidemiological surveillance of those
who enter and leave the community and resources for basic treatment of IPIs are crucial in
combating the transmission of these neglected diseases.
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CARDOSO, Biatriz Araújo et al. Environmental aspects related to tuberculosis and intestinal parasites in a low-income community of the Brazilian Amazon. Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical, v. 59, n. e57, Aug. 2017.xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-decsPrimary
Tuberculose / epidemiologiaTuberculose / transmissão
Mycobacterium tuberculosis / imunologia
Enteropatias Parasitárias / epidemiologia
Enteropatias Parasitárias / transmissão
Resultado do Tratamento
Atenção Primária à Saúde
Estratégia Saúde da Família
Centros de Saúde
Cobertura de Serviços Públicos de Saúde
Fatores Socioeconômicos
Meio Ambiente
Fatores de Risco
Sub-Registro
Estudos Transversais / métodos
Brasil / epidemiologia