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Epidemiology and clinical features of scabies remain largely unknown in Nigeria's rural communities. To fill this gap, we performed a cross-sectional study in three rural communities in north central Nigeria. A total of 500 individuals were included and examined for scabies infestation; a questionnaire was applied to collect socio-demographic and behavioral data. Scabies was diagnosed in 325 (65.0%) participants. Excoriations (68.6%), vesicles (61.8%), and papules (58.8%) were common skin lesions. Itching was the most common symptom (77.5%); 64% complained of sleep disturbances. Lymphadenopathy was identified in 48.3%. Lesions were most commonly encountered on the abdomen (35.5%), inguinal area (19.1%), and interdigital spaces (14.2%). Poverty-related variables, such as illiteracy (OR: 7.15; 95% CI: 3.71-13.95), low household income (7.25; 1.19-88.59), absence of a solid floor inside house (12.17; 2.83-52.34), and overcrowding (1.98; 1.08-2.81) were significantly associated with infestation. Individual behavior, such as sharing of beds/pillows (2.11; 1.42-3.14) and sharing of clothes (2.51; 1.57-3.99), was also highly significantly associated with scabies. Regular bathing habits (0.37; 0.24-0.56) and regular use of bathing soap (0.36; 0.21-0.53) were protective factors. Scabies is extremely common in the communities under study and is associated with considerable morbidity. The disease is intrinsically linked with extreme poverty.
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Epidemiology and clinical features of scabies remain largely unknown in Nigeria's rural communities. To fill this gap, we performed a cross-sectional study in three rural communities in north central Nigeria. A total of 500 individuals were included and examined for scabies infestation; a questionnaire was applied to collect socio-demographic and behavioral data. Scabies was diagnosed in 325 (65.0%) participants. Excoriations (68.6%), vesicles (61.8%), and papules (58.8%) were common skin lesions. Itching was the most common symptom (77.5%); 64% complained of sleep disturbances. Lymphadenopathy was identified in 48.3%. Lesions were most commonly encountered on the abdomen (35.5%), inguinal area (19.1%), and interdigital spaces (14.2%). Poverty-related variables, such as illiteracy (OR: 7.15; 95% CI: 3.71-13.95), low household income (7.25; 1.19-88.59), absence of a solid floor inside house (12.17; 2.83-52.34), and overcrowding (1.98; 1.08-2.81) were significantly associated with infestation. Individual behavior, such as sharing of beds/pillows (2.11; 1.42-3.14) and sharing of clothes (2.51; 1.57-3.99), was also highly significantly associated with scabies. Regular bathing habits (0.37; 0.24-0.56) and regular use of bathing soap (0.36; 0.21-0.53) were protective factors. Scabies is extremely common in the communities under study and is associated with considerable morbidity. The disease is intrinsically linked with extreme poverty.
Open Journal of Epidemiology, 13, 412-420 https://www.scirp.org/journal/ojepi ISSN Online: 2165-7467 ISSN Print: 2165-7459DOI: 10.4236/ojepi.2023.134030, 2023
Introduction: Scabies is a neglected tropical disease with little attention from the international community. This study aimed to investigate the associated factors of scabies within Lalo municipality in Benin in 2023. Methods: This was a case-control study. The sampling size, calculated using OPEN EPI software, was 226 children. Cases were selected exhaustively, and matched to controls by age and village, on a 1:1 basis, using two-stage random sampling. Data were collected from mothers or babysitters by means of a questionnaire. McNemar's Chi 2 test was used to compare cases and controls. Factors associated with scabies were identified using conditional logistic regression. Results: Overall, 122 cases and 122 controls with a mean age of 5.02 ± 3.01 years were involved in the study. Shared bunks (ORa [95% CI] = 6.32 [1.30; 30.82]), household size (ORa [95% CI] = 2.76 [1.05; 7.29]), scabies awareness (ORa [95% CI] = 3.27 [1.68; 6.38]) and personal hygiene (ORa [95% CI] = 3.08 [1.02; 9.25]) were associated with the occurrence of scabies in Lolo's municipality, Benin, in 2023. Conclusion: The identified associated factors show that scabies are indeed linked to poverty, but also to behavioral factors that could be changed through communication.
Annals of Nigerian Medicine, 2012
Background: Scabies is a common parasitic infestation of global proportion. It is a highly contagious skin disease which affects both males and females of all socioeconomic status and race. It is related primarily to poverty and overcrowding, which is also found in most rural communities. This study aimed at assessing the prevalence of scabies among school-aged children in Katanga community. Materials and Methods: In a descriptive cross-sectional study, pre-tested semi-structured questionnaire was administered to 206 school children aged 5-12 years through a total population study in Katanga rural community. Data collected were analyzed using SPSS version 17. Results: In this study, 45 (21.8%) children had skin infections, 33 (73.3%) of these skin infections were associated with itching and 6 cases of scabies were found giving a prevalence rate of 2.9% in the community. Conclusion: This study has shown that scabies is a disease associated with poverty, overcrowding, and sometimes water shortage, and is still endemic in rural communities in Northern Nigeria causing a substantial burden. These findings, coupled with the potential for clinical complications and a heavy socioeconomic impact, suggest that it is time for more concerted actions in terms of provision of adequate domestic water supply and improvement of personal and environmental hygiene against this disease in Nigeria.
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 2009
Background: We sought to study the epidemiology of scabies and to identify risk factors of severe disease in an impoverished rural community in northeast Brazil. Methods: The study was designed as a repeated cross-sectional study based on two door-to-door surveys. One survey was carried out in the rainy season, the other in the dry season. The inhabitants of the community were examined for the presence of scabies and demographic, socioeconomic, and behavioral risk factors were assessed. Risk factors were analyzed using bivariate and multivariate regression analysis. Results: The overall prevalence was 9.8% with no significant variation between seasons and the incidence was estimated to be 196/1000 person-years. The highest prevalence (18.2%) was observed in children younger than 4 years. Risk factors in the bivariate analysis were young age, presence of many children in the household, illiteracy, low family income, poor housing, sharing clothes and towels, and irregular use of shower. Age younger than 15 years, illiteracy, sharing of clothes, and living in the community for more than 6 months remained significant independent risk factors in multivariate regression analysis. Limitations: We used a clinical case definition; specificity and sensitivity were not verified. Men were underrepresented in the study population. Conclusions: In this impoverished community scabies is an important health problem characterized by continuous transmission throughout the year. The parasitic skin disease is embedded in a complex web of causation characterized by poor living conditions and a low level of education.
KESANS International Journal of Health and Science, 2023
Introduction: Scabies is a contagious skin disease caused by the female tick Sarcoptes Scabiei Varieta Hominis which belongs to the Arachnida group. Scabies can occur in countries with tropical and subtropical climates Obective: The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between personal hygiene and environmental conditions with scabies symptoms at Al-Mubarak Islamic Boarding School in Jambi City. Method: This study used an analytical observational method with a Cross Sectional approach, the sample in this study were 85 respondents using simple random sampling. Result and Discussion: The results of this study showed a significant relationship between skin and hand hygiene (p = 0.001), towel hygiene (p = 0.033) with scabies symptoms. There is no relationship between clothing hygiene (p = 0.109) with scabies symptoms. Proportion of physical environmental conditions (clean water facilities, ventilation, occupancy density, humidity) that do not meet requirements 100%. Conclusion: Variables associated with scabies symptoms are skin and hand hygiene, and towel hygiene. Variables that are not associated with scabies symptoms are clothing hygiene. It is recommended to the boarding school to add exhaust fans and also pay attention to the clean water facilities used and the students to maintain personal hygiene such as routine bathing 2x a day, drying clothes and towels in the sun.
Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Research, 2015
Background: Scabies is an ectoparasitic disease caused by Sarcoptes scabie, an obligate human parasite. Its diagnosis is mainly clinical. Several authors have recently described his resurgence. Objectives: This study aimed to describe the epidemiological and clinical profile of human scabies and appreciate its therapeutic outcomes in patients seen in consultation at Hospital Aïoun center. Patients and methods: This is a prospective descriptive study in regional hospital Aïoun (Hodh El Gharbi) over a period from 1 st November 2014 to 31 August 2015. Results: At 10 months, 66 cases were collected, representing a proportional morbidity of 1.6% (mean age 28 years, 59% female). The majority of patients were from urban areas (61%). Family contagion was found in 77% of cases. Among our patients, 64% used the clothes of a member of the entourage. The bad personal hygiene and use lightening cosmetics were observed respectively in 53% and 8% of cases. The clinic was dominated by the nocturnal pruritus associated with scraping ridges (30%), pustules (26%) and vesicles (21%). The main lesions observed sat at the folds or in the inter gluteus (20%), the interdigital spaces (17%), genital lesions (12%) and the armpits (11%). The clinical forms observed were dominated by common form in adults (73%) followed by the common form of infant and children (20%) and profuse form (8%). Among our patients, 33% had a bacterial infection. Under topical anti scabious treatment, antibiotic and antihistamine, the outcome was favorable and no cases of recurrence or complications were observed did. Conclusion: Scabies is a highly contagious to affection, and especially prevalent neglected. Following this work, we recommend public awareness to behavior changes and early diagnosis and taking appropriate burden of disease in order to prevent the epidemic in communities.
Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition, 2023
Background Scabies has been added to the neglected tropical diseases portfolio for large-scale disease control action since 2017 and is part of the WHO roadmap for NTDs 2021-2030, targeted at ending the neglect to achieve the sustainable development goals. Previous studies have not fitted matched analysis to identify predictors of scabies infestation in Ethiopia. Information is also scarce about predictors of scabies infestation in this area. Therefore, this study aimed to identify predictors of scabies infestation in rural Aneded District, northwest Ethiopia. Methods A community-based matched case-control study involving 183 cases and 549 controls was undertaken from March 1 to May 31, 2021, in rural Aneded District. A two-stage sampling technique with a house-to-house census for the screening of scabies cases was employed. A structured questionnaire with questions on sociodemographics, behavior, water supply, sanitation, and hygiene, and delivery of scabies-specific interventions was used. Pretesting, training of data collectors and supervisors, and supervision were applied to keep the data quality. A multivariable conditional logistic regression model was fitted to identify predictors of scabies. Results Unmarried individuals or those in separated families (adjusted matched odds ratio (AmOR = 2.71; 95% CI 1.30-5.65); those unable to read and write or in illiterate families (AmOR = 5.10; 95% CI 1.81-14.36); those in large families (AmOR = 6.67; 95% CI 2.83-15.73); households that had longer travel times for water collection (AmOR = 2.27; 95% CI 1.08-4.76); those that had low daily water consumption (AmOR = 6.69; 95% CI 2.91-15.37); households that disposed of solid wastes in open fields (AmOR = 5.60; 95% CI 2.53-12.40); and households that did not receive scabiesspecific interventions (AmOR = 2.98; 95% CI 1.39-6.39) had increased odds of scabies. Conclusions Being unmarried, illiteracy, large family, long travel time for water collection, low daily water consumption, open dumping of solid wastes, and inaccessibility of scabies-specific interventions are predictors of scabies. This information is instrumental for redesigning improved scabies-specific interventions that consider educational status, marital status, family size, water collection time, daily water consumption, solid waste disposal, and equity and optimization in delivering existing interventions in rural Ethiopia.
2022
Scabies disease is a common and unacceptable disease among young children in developing countries including Ethiopia. This study assessed the prevalence and factors associated with scabies among 5-14 year old children in Boricha District, Sidama Zone, Southern Ethiopia. Multi-stage sampling was employed and children were examined for scabies followed by parent interviews. Descriptive statistic and multivariable analyses were used. Among 590 selected school age children, the prevalence of scabies was 98 (16.6%) [95% CI: 13.6-19.7]. No formal education status of mothers [3.20 , 95% CI (1.03-9.90)], poor household wealth index [3.14, 95% CI (1.10-8.91)], children age 10-14 years [1.84, 95% CI (1.02-3.323)], practice of sharing a bed with a person who had itching lesion [3.38, 95% CI (1.51-7.58)], skin contact with person who had itching lesion [11.67, 95% CI (5.07-26.9)], family member with itchy signs [12.7, 95% CI (5.3-30.6)], frequency of bath of once in more than every two weeks [3.52, 95% CI (1.46-8.74)] were significantly associated with the scabies disease. The prevalence of scabies in the study area was substantially high. Family socioeconomic characteristics and hygiene practice were associated with scabies. Prevention should be focused on economic empowerment and hygiene-related interventions.
Tropical Medicine and Health
Background In 2020, scabies were integrated into the WHO roadmap for neglected tropical diseases, aimed at ending the negligence to realize the SDGs. Ethiopia has also introduced scabies as a notifiable disease in drought-prone localities since 2015. Many of the previous studies employed study designs that might be subject to bias. Moreover, there is no scientific evidence about scabies in this area. Hence, this study aimed to determine the prevalence and associated factors of scabies among children aged below 15 years in rural Ethiopia. Methods A community-based cross-sectional study was carried out among 942 children in rural kebeles of Lay Gayent District from March through May 15, 2021. A two-stage sampling technique was applied. Data on sociodemographics, housing, water supply and sanitation, children’s personal hygiene, and caregivers’ knowledge about scabies were collected by a structured questionnaire. Data quality was maintained through pretesting, training of data collecto...
2014
Avec cet ouvrage prend corps, lentement mais sûrement, la publication d'ensemble des fouilles marseillaises récentes que nous annoncions dans le premier volume, n°7 de cette même collection. Les objets du quotidien, devenus mobilier archéologique du fait de leur enfouissement dans les couches sédimentaires ou de leur insertion dans des maçonneries, font partie intégrante des données que les archéologues utilisent pour la compréhension d'un site archéologique. Ainsi, après avoir donné dans le premier volume le détail de la stratigraphie médiévale et moderne de quelques grands sites fouillés à Marseille, l'évolution de leurs constructions et les avoir replacés dans le contexte plus général de la cité, fallait-il exposer la nature des objets retrouvés. Là encore, il n'était pas possible de décrire précisément le mobilier par unité stratigraphique, ou même de l'indiquer par site archéologique. C'est pourquoi nous avons pris le parti de globaliser ces mobiliers, par grande catégorie en fonction du matériau de fabrication, découpage pratique pour les différents spécialistes qui interviennent dans ce domaine. L'ouvrage a été conduit en collaboration étroite avec Véronique Abel et Florence Parent, deux céramologues expertes de l'Inrap, avec lesquelles nous avons eu l'occasion de travailler tout au long de ces années passées à fouiller et à étudier les contextes marseillais. Elles ont toutes deux une vision large de ce mobilier et ont été à même d'appréhender pleinement la totalité du champ d'étude de ces objets de la vie quotidienne. Notre travail a consisté, à leurs côtés, à coordonner et mettre en forme finale ce travail collectif, travail parfois ingrat mais ô combien nécessaire pour que paraisse le présent ouvrage. Les spécialistes contactés, chevronnés pour certains (comme Danièle Foy, Peter J. Davey, Catherine Richarté ou Joëlle Pournot), un peu moins pour d'autres (Denis Michel) voire beaucoup plus jeunes pour le « petit mobilier » (Olivier Thuaudet et Marie-Astrid Chazottes), ont tous relevé le challenge que représentait la réalisation de ce volume, qui aura nécessité quatre années d'un travail régulier pour voir le jour. Leurs contributions sont précieuses pour élargir un ouvrage qui aurait autrement concerné uniquement le mobilier céramique. Nous voudrions remercier ici les institutions qui continuent à nous faire confiance. Tout d'abord le Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, puisque ces volumes sont conçus dans le cadre d'un Projet collectif de recherches (PCR), labellisé par ce ministère ; l'appui du Service régional de l'Archéologie (DRAC-PACA), et de Stefan Tzorzis en particulier, sous le direction de Xavier Delestre, est ainsi primordial. Ce volume a aussi bénéficié d'un financement direct de la direction générale des patrimoines (sous-direction de l'archéologie). C'est ensuite, l'Inrap qui, année après année, permet à ses agents, par le biais des moyens annuels scientifiques, de disposer du temps nécessaire à l'écriture des différentes contributions. Que Jean-Paul Jacob, son président, François Souq, son directeur interrégional Méditerranée et Hervé Guy, l'adjoint scientifique et technique soient ici remerciés, de même que Pascal Depaepe et Mark Guillon, de la la direction scientifique et technique parisienne de cet organisme. Troisième partenaire indispensable, le Centre Camille Jullian dont les directeurs successifs, Dominique Garcia puis Marie-Brigitte Carre et les directeurs de la publication, Michel Bats puis Henri Tréziny, ont accepté de publier dans la Bibliothèque d'Archéologie Méditerranéenne et Africaine, tous les volumes de notre série « Fouilles à Marseille » ; volumes mis en page grâce au travail précieux de Véronique Gémonet, responsable de la cellule éditoriale. Enfin, il nous est agréable de dédier ce volume à Gabrielle Démians d'Archimbaud, fondatrice du Laboratoire d'Archéologie Médiévale, actuellement placé sous la direction de Henri Amouric avec l'intitulé de Laboratoire d'Archéologie médiévale et moderne en Méditerranée (LA3M). Elle a très largement contribué à susciter, chez Véronique Abel, Florence Parent ou moi-même, le goût de cette archéologie des périodes médiévale et moderne qui a émergé au cours de la seconde moitié du XX e s. Nous lui devons beaucoup.
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