Vector-borne and zoonotic infections and their relationships with regional and socioeconomic statuses: An ID-IRI survey in 24 countries of Europe, Africa and Asia

Autor: Nesrin Ghanem-Zoubi, Meltem Taşbakan, Handan Ankarali, Md. Tanvir Rahman, Natalia Pshenichnaya, Taufiquer Rahman, Marta Vecchi, Alma Tokayeva, Maria Pishmisheva-Peleva, Pilli Hema Prakash Kumari, Roxana Carmen Cernat, Mumtaz Ali Khan, Fatma Nurhayat Saydam, Meliha Meric-Koc, Sholpan Kulzhanova, Edmond Puca, Roman Stebel, Kumar Angamuthu, Yasemin Cag, Fahad Almajid, Hakan Erdem, Aleksandra Barac, Nagwa Mostafa El-Sayed, Ravilya Yegemberdiyeva, Zarema Obradović, Gorana Dragovac, Nasim Akhtar, Manar Ezz El-Arab Ramadan, Fatemeh Moradi Mahmuodabad, Ayse Batirel, Antonio Cascio, Dumitru Irina Magdalena, Hakan Evren, Emanuele Nicastri, Marion Le Maréchal, Lenka Fasanekova, Mustafa Dogan, Serhat Uysal, Andrea Marino, Natalia Dirani, Nenad Pandak, Marija Dimzova, Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales, Jurica Arapović, Amangul Duisenova, Ilkay Bozkurt, Aamer Ikram, Stanislav Kotsev, Ejaz Ahmed Khan, Rosa Fontana Del Vecchio, Agah Victor Maduka, Ainur Sadykova, Safak Ozer-Balin, Ruxandra Moroti, Rok Čivljak, Amjad Mahboob, Samir Al-Moghazi, Yvon Ruch
Přispěvatelé: MERİÇ KOÇ, MELİHA, Saydam F.N., Erdem H., Ankarali H., El-Arab Ramadan M.E., El-Sayed N.M., Civljak R., Pshenichnaya N., Moroti R.V., Mahmuodabad F.M., Maduka A.V., Mahboob A., Prakash Kumari P.H., Stebel R., Cernat R., Fasanekova L., Uysal S., Tasbakan M., Arapovic J., Magdalena D.I., Angamuthu K., Ghanem-Zoubi N., Meric-Koc M., Ruch Y., Marino A., Sadykova A., Batirel A., Khan E.A., Kulzhanova S., Al-Moghazi S., Yegemberdiyeva R., Nicastri E., Pandak N., Akhtar N., Ozer-Balin S., Cascio A., Dimzova M., Evren H., Puca E., Tokayeva A., Vecchi M., Bozkurt I., Dogan M., Dirani N., Duisenova A., Khan M.A., Kotsev S., Obradovic Z., Del Vecchio R.F., Almajid F., Barac A., Dragovac G., Pishmisheva-Peleva M., Rahman M.T., Rahman T., Le Marechal M., Cag Y., Ikram A., Rodriguez-Morales A.J.
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Asia
Surveillance data
030231 tropical medicine
education
Economic statu
Tick
Socioeconomic Factor
Zoonosis
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Economic status
Zoonosi
Multidisciplinary approach
Zoonoses
Environmental health
medicine
Animals
Humans
Hemorrhagic Fever
Crimean

economic status
infection
tick
vector
zoonosis
Socioeconomic status
health care economics and organizations
Cross-Sectional Studie
0303 health sciences
Zoonotic Infection
biology
Animal
030306 microbiology
Significant difference
Public Health
Environmental and Occupational Health

An ID-IRI survey in 24 countries of Europe
Africa and Asia-
TRAVEL MEDICINE AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE
cilt.44
2021 [Saydam F. N.
Erdem H.
ANKARALI H.
Ramadan M. E. E.
El-Sayed N. M.
Civljak R.
Pshenichnaya N.
Moroti R. V.
Mahmuodabad F. M.
Maduka A. V.
et al.
-Vector-borne and zoonotic infections and their relationships with regional and socioeconomic statuses]

medicine.disease
biology.organism_classification
3. Good health
Europe
Cross-Sectional Studies
Infectious Diseases
Geography
Socioeconomic Factors
Vector (epidemiology)
Africa
Hemorrhagic Fever Virus
Crimean-Congo

Vector
Infection
Popis: Background: In this cross-sectional, international study, we aimed to analyze vector-borne and zoonotic infections (VBZI), which are significant global threats. Method: VBZIs’ data between May 20–28, 2018 was collected. The 24 Participatingcountries were classified as lower-middle, upper-middle, and high-income. Results: 382 patients were included. 175(45.8%) were hospitalized, most commonly in Croatia, Egypt, and Romania(P = 0.001). There was a significant difference between distributions of VBZIs according to geographical regions(P < 0.001). Amebiasis, Ancylostomiasis, Blastocystosis, Cryptosporidiosis, Giardiasis, Toxoplasmosis were significantly more common in the Middle-East while Bartonellosis, Borreliosis, Cat Scratch Disease, Hantavirus syndrome, Rickettsiosis, Campylobacteriosis, Salmonellosis in Central/East/South-East Europe; Brucellosis and Echinococcosis in Central/West Asia; Campylobacteriosis, Chikungunya, Tick-borne encephalitis, Visceral Leishmaniasis, Salmonellosis, Toxoplasmosis in the North-Mediterranean; CCHF, Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, Dengue, Malaria, Taeniasis, Salmonellosis in Indian Subcontinent; Lassa Fever in West Africa. There were significant regional differences for viral hemorrhagic fevers(P < 0.001) and tick-borne infections(P < 0.001), and according to economic status for VBZIs(P < 0.001). The prevalences of VBZIs were significantly higher in lower-middle income countries(P = 0.001). The most similar regions were the Indian Subcontinent and the Middle-East, the Indian Subcontinent and the North-Mediterranean, and the Middle-East and North-Mediterranean regions. Conclusions: Regional and socioeconomic heterogeneity still exists for VBZIs. Control and eradication of VBZIs require evidence-based surveillance data, and multidisciplinary efforts.
Databáze: OpenAIRE