“…A review paper leads the other major section on STH, which focuses on the prevalence of STHs in different groups, including immigrants, travellers, military personnel and veterans in Australia and Asia [ 6 ]. This is followed by studies examining an extended period of surveillance data on Strongyloides stercoralis [ 7 ]; and a study examining the prevalence of STHs in remote Aboriginal communities, both in the Northern Territory, Australia [ 8 ]; and a study examining the links between dietary intake, nutritional status, and intestinal parasites, such as Schistosoma japonicum , Ascaris lumbricoides , Trichuris trichiura , and hookworm, in the Philippines [ 9 ]. The two rickettsial papers examine hospital admissions for Queensland tick typhus in north Brisbane, Australia [ 10 ], and the other study based in Thailand looks at the influence of land use on scrub typhus in rodents [ 11 ].…”