23 research outputs found

    Cholera Epidemic in Guinea-Bissau (2008): The Importance of “Place”

    Get PDF
    As resources are limited when responding to cholera outbreaks, knowledge about where to orient interventions is crucial. We describe the cholera epidemic affecting Guinea-Bissau in 2008 focusing on the geographical spread in order to guide prevention and control activities

    Pour une approche globale et solidaire en sécurité alimentaire

    Get PDF
    Les données disponibles sur l'insécurité alimentaire sont souvent réductrices ou inadéquates, donnant lieu à une certaine «invisibilisation» du problème. En France, la dernière enquête d'ampleur réalisée il y a dix ans par l'Agence nationale, alimentation, environnement, travail précisait que 12% des ménages étaient en insécurité alimentaire, surtout les petits salariés, les personnes seules, les familles et les personnes sans abri (ANSES 2007). Au Canada, en 2012, l'insécurité alimentaire touchait 11,4% de la population, dont 1,15 million d'enfants (Tarasuk et al. 2012). Les groupes les plus concernés sont les familles monoparentales, les femmes, les autochtones, les personnes à faible revenu (dont les personnes assistées sociales et les travailleurs pauvres), les personnes seules, les personnes vivant en colocation (souvent aux études) et les familles avec des enfants âgés de 5 à 12 ans (Régimbal, et al, 2016). En Italie, en 2014, 12,6% de la population était touchée par ce problème (contre 7,5% en 2008) (Eurostat 2015 ; Maino et al., 2016). Bien qu'il n'existe aucune donnée spécifique sur la situation de la pauvreté alimentaire en Espagne et en Catalogne, il est permis de croire que près d'un tiers de la population risque de se retrouver dans cette situation (Fargas et al., 2014; Pomar et Tendero, 2015)

    Oral polio vaccine response in the MAL-ED birth cohort study: Considerations for polio eradication strategies

    Get PDF
    Background: Immunization programs have leveraged decades of research to maximize oral polio vaccine (OPV) response. Moving toward global poliovirus eradication, the WHO recommended phased OPV-to-IPV replacement on schedules in 2012. Using the MAL-ED prospective birth cohort data, we evaluated the influence of early life exposures impacting OPV immunization by measuring OPV response for serotypes 1 and 3.Methods: Polio neutralizing antibody assays were conducted at 7 and 15 months of age for serotypes 1 and 3. Analyses were conducted on children receiving ≥3 OPV doses (n = 1449). History of vaccination, feeding patterns, physical growth, home environment, diarrhea, enteropathogen detection, and gut inflammation were examined as risk factors for non-response [Log2(titer) \u3c 3] and Log2(titer) by serotype using multivariate regression.Findings: Serotype 1 seroconversion was significantly higher than serotype 3 (96.6% vs. 89.6%, 15 months). Model results indicate serotypes 1 and 3 failure was minimized following four and six OPV doses, respectively; however, enteropathogen detection and poor socioeconomic conditions attenuated response in both serotypes. At three months of age, bacterial detection in stool reduced serotype 1 and 3 Log2 titers by 0.34 (95% CI 0.14–0.54) and 0.53 (95% CI 0.29–0.77), respectively, and increased odds of serotype 3 failure by 3.0 (95% CI 1.6–5.8). Our socioeconomic index, consisting of Water, Assets, Maternal education, and Income (WAMI), was associated with a 0.79 (95% CI 0.15–1.43) and 1.23 (95% CI 0.34–2.12) higher serotype 1 and 3 Log2 titer, respectively, and a 0.04 (95% CI 0.002–0.40) lower odds of serotype 3 failure. Introduction of solids, transferrin receptor, and underweight were differentially associated with serotype response. Other factors, including diarrheal frequency and breastfeeding practices, were not associated with OPV response.Interpretation: Under real-world conditions, improved vaccination coverage and socio-environmental conditions, and reducing early life bacterial exposures are key to improving OPV response and should inform polio eradication strategies

    Spatial clustering in the spatio-temporal dynamics of endemic cholera

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The spatio-temporal patterns of infectious diseases that are environmentally driven reflect the combined effects of transmission dynamics and environmental heterogeneity. They contain important information on different routes of transmission, including the role of environmental reservoirs. Consideration of the spatial component in infectious disease dynamics has led to insights on the propagation of fronts at the level of counties in rabies in the US, and the metapopulation behavior at the level of cities in childhood diseases such as measles in the UK, both at relatively coarse scales. As epidemiological data on individual infections become available, spatio-temporal patterns can be examined at higher resolutions.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The extensive spatio-temporal data set for cholera in Matlab, Bangladesh, maps the individual location of cases from 1983 to 2003. This unique record allows us to examine the spatial structure of cholera outbreaks, to address the role of primary transmission, occurring from an aquatic reservoir to the human host, and that of secondary transmission, involving a feedback between current and past levels of infection. We use Ripley's K and L indices and bootstrapping methods to evaluate the occurrence of spatial clustering in the cases during outbreaks using different temporal windows. The spatial location of cases was also confronted against the spatial location of water sources.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Spatial clustering of cholera cases was detected at different temporal and spatial scales. Cases relative to water sources also exhibit spatial clustering.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The clustering of cases supports an important role of secondary transmission in the dynamics of cholera epidemics in Matlab, Bangladesh. The spatial clustering of cases relative to water sources, and its timing, suggests an effective role of water reservoirs during the onset of cholera outbreaks. Once primary transmission has initiated an outbreak, secondary transmission takes over and plays a fundamental role in shaping the epidemics in this endemic area.</p

    Macrosocial determinants of population health in the context of globalization

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/55738/1/florey_globalization_2007.pd
    corecore