Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Centre for Enteric Diseases, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2018 Sep;99(3_Suppl):55-63. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.18-0182. Epub 2018 Jul 24.
Typhoid fever is notifiable in South Africa but clinical notification is notoriously poor. South Africa has an estimated annual incidence rate of 0.1 cases per 100,000 population of culture-confirmed typhoid fever, decreased from 17 cases per 100,000 population in the 1980s. This work was undertaken to identify the reasons for this decrease and identify potential weaknesses that may result in an increase of observed cases. Culture-confirmed cases, with additional demographic and clinical data have been collected from selected sentinel sites since 2003. Data on contextual factors (gross domestic product [GDP], sanitation, female education, and childhood diarrhea mortality) were collected. National incidence rates of culture-confirmed typhoid fever have remained constant for the past 13 years, with the exception of an outbreak in 2005: incidence was 0.4 per 100,000 population. Paratyphoid fever remains a rare disease. Antimicrobial susceptibility data suggest resistance to ciprofloxacin and azithromycin is emerging. The South African population increased from 27.5 million in 1980 to 55.0 million in 2015: urbanization increased from 50% to 65%, GDP increased from United States Dollar (USD) $2,910 to USD $6,167, access to sanitation improved from 64.4% to 70.0% in the urban population and 26.4% to 60.5% in rural areas. Female literacy levels improved from 74.8% to 92.6% over the period. Improved socioeconomic circumstances in South Africa have been temporally associated with decreasing incidence rates of typhoid fever over a 35-year period. Ongoing challenges remain including potential for large outbreaks, a large immigrant population, and emerging antimicrobial resistance. Continued active surveillance is mandatory.
南非伤寒病例须上报,但临床上报情况却很差。南非经培养确诊的伤寒发病率估计为每 10 万人中有 0.1 例,较 20 世纪 80 年代每 10 万人中有 17 例有所下降。本研究旨在确定发病率下降的原因,并发现可能导致报告病例增加的潜在弱点。自 2003 年以来,我们在选定的哨点收集了经培养确诊的病例,同时收集了更多的人口统计学和临床数据。还收集了与上下文相关的因素(国内生产总值[GDP]、卫生设施、女性教育和儿童腹泻死亡率)的数据。过去 13 年来,南非伤寒的全国发病率一直保持不变,仅在 2005 年发生过一次疫情:发病率为每 10 万人中有 0.4 例。副伤寒仍属罕见疾病。抗生素药敏数据表明,对环丙沙星和阿奇霉素的耐药性正在出现。1980 年南非人口为 2750 万,到 2015 年增至 5500 万:城市化率从 50%上升到 65%,国内生产总值(GDP)从 2910 美元上升到 6167 美元,城市人口的卫生设施普及率从 64.4%提高到 70.0%,农村地区从 26.4%提高到 60.5%。在此期间,女性识字率从 74.8%提高到 92.6%。南非社会经济状况的改善与伤寒发病率在 35 年间下降有关。目前仍存在一些挑战,包括发生大规模疫情的可能性、大量移民人口以及新出现的抗生素耐药性。持续的主动监测是必要的。