Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.
Int J Health Geogr. 2009 Jul 9;8:42. doi: 10.1186/1476-072X-8-42.
Reliable and updated maps of helminth (worm) infection distributions are essential to target control strategies to those populations in greatest need. Although many surveys have been conducted in endemic countries, the data are rarely available in a form that is accessible to policy makers and the managers of public health programmes. This is especially true in sub-Saharan Africa, where empirical data are seldom in the public domain. In an attempt to address the paucity of geographical information on helminth risk, this article describes the development of an updated global atlas of human helminth infection, showing the example of East Africa.
Empirical, cross-sectional estimates of infection prevalence conducted since 1980 were identified using electronic and manual search strategies of published and unpublished sources. A number of inclusion criteria were imposed for identified information, which was extracted into a standardized database. Details of survey population, diagnostic methods, sample size and numbers infected with schistosomes and soil-transmitted helminths were recorded. A unique identifier linked each record to an electronic copy of the source document, in portable document format. An attempt was made to identify the geographical location of each record using standardized geolocation procedures and the assembled data were incorporated into a geographical information system.
At the time of writing, over 2,748 prevalence surveys were identified through multiple search strategies. Of these, 2,612 were able to be geolocated and mapped. More than half (58%) of included surveys were from grey literature or unpublished sources, underlining the importance of reviewing in-country sources. 66% of all surveys were conducted since 2000. Comprehensive, countrywide data are available for Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda. In contrast, information for Kenya and Tanzania is typically clustered in specific regions of the country, with few records from areas with very low population density and/or environmental conditions which are unfavourable for helminth transmission. Information is presented on the prevalence and geographical distribution for the major helminth species.
For all five countries, the information assembled in the current atlas provides the most reliable, up-to-date and comprehensive source of data on the distribution of common helminth infections to guide the rational implementation of control efforts.
可靠且最新的寄生虫(蠕虫)感染分布地图对于将控制策略针对最需要的人群至关重要。尽管在流行地区进行了许多调查,但这些数据很少以决策者和公共卫生项目管理者可访问的形式提供。在撒哈拉以南非洲尤其如此,那里很少有经验数据公开。为了解决寄生虫风险的地理信息匮乏问题,本文描述了开发一个更新的全球人类寄生虫感染图谱,以东非为例。
使用电子和手动搜索策略,从已发表和未发表的来源中确定了自 1980 年以来进行的寄生虫感染患病率的实证、横断面估计。对确定的信息施加了一些纳入标准,并将其提取到标准化数据库中。记录了调查人群、诊断方法、样本量以及感染血吸虫和土壤传播寄生虫的人数。为每个记录分配一个唯一标识符,并将其链接到源文档的可移植文档格式的电子副本。尝试使用标准化地理定位程序识别每个记录的地理位置,并将收集的数据纳入地理信息系统。
在撰写本文时,通过多种搜索策略确定了超过 2748 项患病率调查。其中,2612 项能够进行地理位置定位和映射。超过一半(58%)的纳入调查来自灰色文献或未发表的来源,这强调了审查国内来源的重要性。所有调查中有 66%是在 2000 年以后进行的。布隆迪、卢旺达和乌干达有全面的全国性数据。相比之下,肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚的信息通常集中在该国的特定地区,很少有来自人口密度非常低和/或不利于寄生虫传播的环境条件的地区的记录。本文介绍了主要寄生虫物种的患病率和地理分布信息。
对于所有五个国家,当前图谱中汇总的信息提供了最可靠、最新和最全面的常见寄生虫感染分布数据,以指导合理实施控制工作。