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Soil-transmitted helminthiasis in four districts in Bangladesh
Household cluster surveys of prevalence and intervention status
Davlin, S. L., Jones, A. H., Tahmina, S., Al Kawsar, A., Joshi, A., Zaman, S. I., Rahman, M. M., Morawski, B. M., Deming, M. S., Imtiaz, R., & Karim, M. J. (2020). Soil-transmitted helminthiasis in four districts in Bangladesh: Household cluster surveys of prevalence and intervention status. BMC Public Health, 20(1), 672. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-08755-w
Background: In 2016, after 8 years of twice-annual nationwide preventive chemotherapy (PC) administration to school-age children (SAC), the Bangladesh Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MOHFW) sought improved impact and intervention monitoring data to assess progress toward the newly adopted goal of eliminating soil-transmitted helminthiasis (STH) as a public health problem. Methods: We surveyed four Bangladeshi districts between August and October 2017. We conducted a multi-stage, cluster-sample, household survey which produced equal-probability samples for preschool-age children (PSAC; 1–4years), SAC (5–14 years), and adults (≥ 15 years). Standardized questionnaires were administered, using Androidbased smart phones running an Open Data Kit application. Stool samples were collected and testing for STH prevalence and infection intensity used the Kato-Katz technique.Results: In all, 4318 stool samples were collected from 7164 participants. Estimates of STH prevalence by risk group in three of the four surveyed districts ranged from 3.4 to 5.0%, all with upper, 1-sided 95% confidence limits < 10%.However, STH prevalence estimates in Sirajganj District ranged from 23.4 to 29.1%. Infections in that district were spatially focal; four of the 30 survey clusters had > 50% prevalence in at least one risk group. Among all tested specimens, Ascaris lumbricoides was the most common STH parasite [8.2% (n = 352)], followed by Trichuris trichiura [0.9% (n = 37)], and hookworm [0.6% (n = 27)]. In each district, PC coverage among SAC was above the 75% program target but did not exceed 45% among PSAC in any district. Improved sanitation at home, school, or work was over 90% in all districts.