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Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health ; 1990 Dec; 21(4): 574-9
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-33261

ABSTRACT

Symptomatic intestinal amebiasis was highly endemic among the Cambodians living at Green Hill, an evacuation site on the Thai-Cambodian border between June 1987 through May 1989. Monthly incidence rates of intestinal amebiasis were determined to be inversely proportional to cumulative monthly rainfall. The highest incidence of amebic dysentery was 63/1000 in children 12-23 months old. Behavioral risk factors were investigated by conducting a case-control study. A questionnaire was administered to 73 families, each having at least one member with confirmed intestinal amebiasis within the past 3 months, and to 95 randomly selected control families having no individual with diarrhea for at least 3 months. Individuals from families with greater than 4 members were at higher risk for acquiring intestinal amebiasis. No significant differences in behavioral risk factors were identified between case and control families. Eighty-six percent of 51 water samples drawn from wells where amebiasis patients obtained their drinking water had greater than 10 coliforms/100 ml. The main route of transmission of E. histolytica was not identified, but was most likely via the fecal-oral route.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Cambodia/ethnology , Case-Control Studies , Child , Child, Preschool , Dysentery, Amebic/epidemiology , Female , Health Behavior , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Prevalence , Refugees , Risk Factors , Sanitation/standards , Seasons , Thailand/epidemiology , Water Supply/standards
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