The malaria and typhoid fever burden in the slums of Kolkata, India: data from a prospective community-based study.
Sur, Dipika;
von Seidlein, Lorenz;
Manna, Byomkesh;
Dutta, Shanta;
Deb, Alok K;
Sarkar, Banwari Lal;
Kanungo, Suman;
Deen, Jacqueline L;
Ali, Mohammad;
Kim, Deok Ryun;
+6 more...Gupta, Vinay Kumar;
Ochiai, R Leon;
Tsuzuki, Ataru;
Acosta, Camilo J;
Clemens, John D;
Bhattacharya, Sujit K;
(2006)
The malaria and typhoid fever burden in the slums of Kolkata, India: data from a prospective community-based study.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 100 (8).
pp. 725-733.
ISSN 0035-9203
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trstmh.2005.10.019
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Recent research has indicated that the malaria burden in Asia may have been vastly underestimated. We conducted a prospective community-based study in an impoverished urban site in Kolkata, India, to estimate the burden of malaria and typhoid fever and to identify risk factors for these diseases. In a population of 60452 people, 3605 fever episodes were detected over a 12-month period. The blood films of 93 febrile patients contained Plasmodium (90 P. vivax, 2 P. falciparum and 1 P. malariae). Blood cultures from 95 patients grew Salmonella enterica serotype Typhi. Malaria patients were found to be significantly older (mean age 29 years) compared with patients with typhoid fever (15 years; P<0.001) but had similar clinical features on presentation. Having a household member with malaria, illiteracy, low household income and living in a structure not built of bricks were associated with an increased risk for malaria. Having a household member with typhoid fever and poor hygiene were associated with typhoid fever. A geographic analysis of the spatial distribution of malaria and typhoid fever cases detected high-risk neighbourhoods for each disease. Focal interventions to minimise human-vector contact and improved personal hygiene and targeted vaccination campaigns could help to prevent malaria and typhoid fever in this site.