Jha Swati, Devaliya Divyesh, Bergson Susan, Desai Shripad
AmeriCares india Foundation, Mumbai, India.
2AmeriCares, Stamford, CT USA.
Hepatol Med Policy. 2016 May 12;1:5. doi: 10.1186/s41124-016-0007-7. eCollection 2016.
More than 17 million people in India are chronically infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV). Approximately one million of the 26 million children born in India annually will develop chronic HBV infection in the course of their lives. Studies have put the HBsAg prevalence rate among pregnant women in India between 0.9 % and 3.1, indicating a considerable need for public health interventions aimed at protecting their offspring from infection. The PAHAL project in Mumbai, India, conducted an HBV knowledge survey among women of childbearing age in three local slum communities preparatory to planning a comprehensive HBV education intervention targeting this population.
Female health workers approached all households in three designated slum neighborhoods: one each in the eastern suburbs (ES), western suburbs (WS) and Island City (IC). Female residents aged 18-45 were invited to participate in the study, and those who agreed to participate responded to a questionnaire that was administered in the form of an oral interview. The five sections of the questionnaire addressed demography, hepatitis B knowledge, personal risk related to hepatitis B, pregnancy and childbearing history, and the participant's most recent pregnancy. A descriptive statistical analysis was performed.
Health workers submitted 6571 interview forms that were suitable for analysis (ES, 28 %; WS, 34 %; IC, 38 %). Large proportions of study participants were married (89 %), were not employed (94 %) and had completed less than 12 years of school (87 %). Only 240 (3.6 %) women answered yes when asked if they knew about hepatitis B. Among those women, there were high levels of accurate knowledge regarding some modes of hepatitis B transmission but low levels of accurate knowledge regarding other modes. Twenty-two percent of 739 women who had given birth within the previous 36 months reported that they had been tested for HBV during pregnancy. While 70 % of these women reported that their children had received three doses of hepatitis B vaccine, reported vaccination levels varied greatly across the three study areas.
Despite the availability of a safe HBV vaccine, which is free for newborns and infants in many parts of India, preventing mother-to-child transmission of HBV remains a major challenge. Low awareness of HBV among women of childbearing age in Mumbai-area slums indicates a need for educational interventions targeting this population.
印度有超过1700万人长期感染乙肝病毒(HBV)。印度每年出生的2600万儿童中,约有100万人在其一生中会发展为慢性HBV感染。研究表明,印度孕妇的乙肝表面抗原(HBsAg)流行率在0.9%至3.1%之间,这表明迫切需要采取公共卫生干预措施,以保护她们的后代免受感染。印度孟买的PAHAL项目在三个当地贫民窟社区对育龄妇女进行了一项乙肝知识调查,为针对该人群规划全面的乙肝教育干预措施做准备。
女性卫生工作者走访了三个指定贫民窟社区的所有家庭:东郊(ES)、西郊(WS)和岛城(IC)各一个。邀请年龄在18至45岁的女性居民参与研究,同意参与的人通过口头访谈的形式回答一份问卷。问卷的五个部分涉及人口统计学、乙肝知识、与乙肝相关的个人风险、怀孕和生育史以及参与者最近的一次怀孕情况。进行了描述性统计分析。
卫生工作者提交了6571份适合分析的访谈表格(ES占28%;WS占34%;IC占38%)。很大比例的研究参与者已婚(89%)、未就业(94%)且学历低于12年(87%)。当被问及是否了解乙肝时,只有240名(3.6%)女性回答是。在这些女性中,对乙肝某些传播方式的准确知晓程度较高,但对其他传播方式的准确知晓程度较低。在过去36个月内分娩的739名女性中,22%报告在孕期接受了乙肝检测。虽然这些女性中有70%报告其孩子接种了三针乙肝疫苗,但三个研究区域的报告接种率差异很大。
尽管印度许多地区为新生儿和婴儿免费提供了安全的乙肝疫苗,但预防乙肝病毒母婴传播仍然是一项重大挑战。孟买地区贫民窟育龄妇女对乙肝的认知度较低,这表明需要针对该人群开展教育干预措施。