Community based parasitic screening and treatment of Sudanese refugees: application and assessment of Centers for Disease Control guidelines.

Stephanie K Brodine, Anne Thomas, Robert Huang,Judith Harbertson,Sanjay Mehta, John Leake,Thomas Nutman, Kathleen Moser, Jamie Wolf,Roshan Ramanathan,Peter Burbelo, John Nou,Patricia Wilkins,Sharon L Reed

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE(2009)

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摘要
Centers for Disease Control guidelines for schistosomiasis and strongyloidiasis in Sudanese and Somali refugecs arc not widely implemented. Given limited prevalence data, we conducted a seroprevalence study of schistosomiasis, strongyloidiasis, and loiasis in Sudanese refugees across diverse ages. Sudanese refugees, ages 4-78, were recruited via community organizations. Half of the patients (86/172), were seropositive for schistosomiasis (46/171;26.9%), strongyloidiasis (56/172;33%), or both (16/171;9.4%). No Loa loa infections were detected. Infection rates were similar in adults and children except that no schistosomiasis was detected in children < 4 years of age at the time of immigration to the United States. The high prevalence of schistosomiasis and strongyloidiasis in a community-based sample of Sudanese confirms the urgency for compliance with CDC refugee health guidelines. We detected no co-infection with Loa loa using the most sensitive serologic techniques, allowing use of ivermectin, the most effective treatment of strongyloidiasis.
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关键词
screening,community organization,refugees,immigrants,civil war
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