2003
DOI: 10.1093/phr/118.1.59
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Outbreak of Beriberi Among Illegal Mainland Chinese Immigrants at a Detention Center in Taiwan

Abstract: Objective. The authors describe an outbreak of beriberi in a detention center in Taiwan and examine risk factors for illness. Methods.A survey was conducted among a sample of 176 randomly selected detainees. A menu-assisted dietary recall method was used to obtain diet information from nine hospitalized detainees. A probable case patient was defined as an individual who had at least two of the following characteristics: leg edema, weakness of the extremities, poor appetite, and dyspnea. Possible case patients … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The combined form of beriberi was the most frequently diagnosed clinical form. These findings are similar to those described for other outbreaks in detention centers [8,10,20]. The absence of cases among women was probably related to the fact that they cooked their own meals inside the prison with various ingredients brought to them during visits or bought in their own prison market.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…The combined form of beriberi was the most frequently diagnosed clinical form. These findings are similar to those described for other outbreaks in detention centers [8,10,20]. The absence of cases among women was probably related to the fact that they cooked their own meals inside the prison with various ingredients brought to them during visits or bought in their own prison market.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…We report here a large outbreak of beriberi in a prison context, with more than 700 cases among an overall at-risk population of 5,000 detainees. The overall attack rate (14%) was close to the rates in previous outbreaks in prisons in West Africa (19%) and Taiwan (24%) [8,10]. The case fatality rate observed in this study was relatively low (1%), probably because of the prompt initiation of thiamin treatment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…Between 2008 and 2014, an increasing number of Myanmarese refugees admitted in Malaysia with acute/subacute predominantly sensorimotor axonal PN was observed: most of them were malnourished, with a preceding history of starvation of 2-4 weeks before onset of symptoms [64]. This clinical picture was closed to the neurological complications of thiamine deficiency, as observed in other refugees [65] or prisoners [66], so a nutritional cause was suggested. Moreover, folate and vitamin B12 deficiencies were also detected in 31.5% of the patients, and most of them improved after supportive treatment with appropriate vitamins supplementation [64].…”
Section: Myanmarese Neuropathymentioning
confidence: 98%