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   Environmental Transmission of Typhoid Fever in an Urban Slum  
   
نویسنده akullian a. ,ng’eno e. ,matheson a.i. ,cosmas l. ,macharia d. ,fields b. ,bigogo g. ,mugoh m. ,john-stewart g. ,walson j.l. ,wakefield j. ,montgomery j.m.
منبع plos neglected tropical diseases - 2015 - دوره : 9 - شماره : 12
چکیده    Background: enteric fever due to salmonella typhi (typhoid fever) occurs in urban areas with poor sanitation. while direct fecal-oral transmission is thought to be the predominant mode of transmission,recent evidence suggests that indirect environmental transmission may also contribute to disease spread. methods: data from a population-based infectious disease surveillance system (28,000 individuals followed biweekly) were used to map the spatial pattern of typhoid fever in kibera,an urban informal settlement in nairobi kenya,between 2010–2011. spatial modeling was used to test whether variations in topography and accumulation of surface water explain the geographic patterns of risk. results: among children less than ten years of age,risk of typhoid fever was geographically heterogeneous across the study area (p = 0.016) and was positively associated with lower elevation,or = 1.87,95% ci (1.36–2.57),p <0.001. in contrast,the risk of typhoid fever did not vary geographically or with elevation among individuals less than 6b ten years of age. conclusions: our results provide evidence of indirect,environmental transmission of typhoid fever among children,a group with high exposure to fecal pathogens in the environment. spatially targeting sanitation interventions may decrease enteric fever transmission. © 2015,public library of science. all rights reserved.
آدرس university of washington,school of public health and community medicine,department of epidemiology,seattle,wa, United States, kenya medical research institute,center for global health research (kemri-cghr), Kenya, university of washington,school of public health and community medicine,department of epidemiology,seattle,wa, United States, division of global health protection,center for global health,centers for disease control and prevention-kenya,nairobi, Kenya, division of global health protection,center for global health,centers for disease control and prevention-kenya,nairobi, Kenya, division of global health protection,center for global health,centers for disease control and prevention-kenya,nairobi, Kenya, kenya medical research institute,center for global health research (kemri-cghr), Kenya, kenya medical research institute,center for global health research (kemri-cghr), Kenya, departments of global health,medicine,pediatrics and epidemiology,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, departments of global health,medicine,pediatrics and epidemiology,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, university of washington,department of statistics and biostatistics,seattle,wa, United States, division of global health protection,center for global health,centers for disease control and prevention-kenya,nairobi, Kenya
 
     
   
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