Due to the persistence of dengue and other arbovirus infections in Brazil, the government has stepped up measures to combat the Aedes aegypti mosquito vector. The responsibilities of community endemic disease workers (CEDW) and community health workers (CHW) include acting as intermediaries and disseminating knowledge in the community. The aim of this study was to analyze knowledge and practices in dengue control by different social subjects: residents and CEDW/CHW. Interviews were held with residents, field and mobilization CEDW, and CHW in two neighborhoods in Salvador, Bahia State, using focus groups. Residents expressed uncertainty on the form of transmission and hazards of dengue. Field CEDW voiced conflicting feelings due to the need to inform the community on issues over which they lack any control, while expressing personal dissatisfaction with their work and a feeling of underappreciation due to their lack of training. Mobilization CEDW blamed the population and emphasized their own importance as the solution to dengue control. CHW failed to reflect their field experience in their discourse and felt they had no responsibility over vector control. All the groups agreed that government is to blame for dengue and that the solution lies in education. There is an evident need for regular educational interventions, based on dialogue and awareness-raising to deal with residents' daily reality, drawing individuals (residents and CHW) into the knowledge-building process. Under the prevailing methodology, the dissemination of information and knowledge is insufficient to promote community improvements for dengue control.
RESUMONa região do Subúrbio Ferroviário da Cidade do Salvador (Bahia, Brasil), foram relatados casos de esquistossomose, e isso motivou este estudo de prevalência em 268 escolares residentes em um dos seus bairros (São Bartolomeu). Em 30,2% das crianças, o exame parasitológico (Kato-Katz) foi positivo, com carga parasitária entre 24 a 2.160 ovos de Schistosoma mansoni/g de fezes, predominando entre os meninos e nos maiores de 10 anos de idade. Nas crianças com residências mais próximas das coleções naturais de água, ocorreu maior freqüência de eliminadores de ovos e nela residiam os três únicos casos com a forma hepatosplênica da esquistossomose. Também, todas as 81 crianças com ovos de Schistosoma mansoni nas fezes nasceram e sempre residiram na área de estudo. Como nesse bairro há todos os elementos da cadeia epidemiológica do Schistosoma mansoni, são fortes as evidências da transmissão urbana dessa infecção. Palavras-chaves: Esquistossomose mansônica. Transmissão urbana. Escolares. Salvador. Bahia. ABSTRACTIn the Subúrbio Ferroviário region of Salvador (Bahia, Brasil) occurrences of schistosomiasis were found. This fact motivated the investigation of the prevalence of the eggs in a group of 268 resident students in one of its neighborhoods (São Bartolomeu). The parasitological test analyzed by the Kato-Katz methodology, showed positive results in 30.2% of the children, ranging from 24 to 2,160 eggs Schistosoma mansoni/gram of feces. Infection was predominant in boys and in those 10 years old and over. Observation revealed that infection predominated in children that live close to natural water bodies. This region was where the three registered cases of hepatosplenicos occurred. Moreover, all the 81 children infected with Schistosoma mansoni eggs were born and live in the study area. Since this neighborhood presents all the elements of the epidemiological chain of Schistosoma mansoni, the evidences strongly suggests the urban transmission of this infection.
Urbanization is increasing across the globe, and diseases once considered rural can now be found in urban areas due to the migration of populations from rural endemic areas, local transmission within the city, or a combination of factors. We investigated the epidemiologic characteristics of urban immigrants and natives living in a neighborhood of Salvador, Brazil where there is a focus of transmission of Schistosoma mansoni. In a cross-sectional study, all inhabitants from 3 sections of the community were interviewed and examined. In order to determine the degree of parasite differentiation between immigrants and the native born, S. mansoni eggs from stools were genotyped for 15 microsatellite markers. The area received migrants from all over the state, but most infected children had never been outside of the city, and infected snails were present at water contact sites. Other epidemiologic features suggested immigration contributed little to the presence of infection. The intensity and prevalence of infection were the same for immigrants and natives when adjusted for age, and length of immigrant residence in the community was positively associated with prevalence of infection. The population structure of the parasites also supported that the contribution from immigration was small, since the host-to-host differentiation was no greater in the urban parasite population than a rural population with little distant immigration, and there had been little differentiation in the urban population over the past 7 years. Public health efforts should focus on eliminating local transmission, and once eliminated, reintroduction from distant migration is unlikely.
Many parasite populations are difficult to sample because they are non-uniformly distributed between several host species and are often not easily collected from the living host, limiting sample size and possibly distorting the representation of the population. For the parasite Schistosoma mansoni, we investigated the use of the aggregated eggs found in the stool of infected individuals as a simple and representative sample. Previously, we demonstrated that microsatellite allele frequencies can be accurately estimated from pooled DNA of cloned S. mansoni adults, and we show here that genotyping parasite populations from reproductively isolated laboratory strains can be used to identify these specific populations based on characteristic patterns of allele frequencies, as observed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and automated sequencer analysis of fluorescently labeled PCR products. In addition, microsatellites used to genotype aggregates of eggs collected from stools of infected individuals produced results consistent with the geographic distribution of the samples. Direct analysis of total stool eggs can be an important approach to questions of population genetics for this parasite by increasing the sample size to thousands per individual and reducing bias.
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