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1.
Eur J Epidemiol ; 2024 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38671254

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Between 2019-2021, facing public concern, a scientific expert committee (SEC) reanalysed suspected clusters of transverse upper limb reduction defects (TULRD) in three administrative areas in France, where initial investigations had not identified any risk exposure. We share here the national approach we developed for managing suspicious clusters of the same group of congenital anomalies occurring in several areas. METHODS: The SEC analysed the medical records of TURLD suspected cases and performed spatiotemporal analyses on confirmed cases. If the cluster was statistically significant and included at least three cases, the SEC reviewed exposures obtained from questionnaires, environmental databases, and a survey among farmers living near to cases' homes concerning their plant product use. RESULTS: After case re-ascertainment, no statistically significant cluster was observed in the first administrative areas. In the second area, a cluster of four children born in two nearby towns over two years was confirmed, but as with the initial investigations, no exposure to a known risk factor explaining the number of cases in excess was identified. In the third area, a cluster including just two cases born the same year in the same town was confirmed. DISCUSSION: Our experience highlights that in the event of suspicious clusters occurring in different areas of a country, a coordinated and standardised approach should be preferred.

2.
Gynecol Obstet Fertil Senol ; 52(4): 273-279, 2024 Apr.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38373495

ABSTRACT

Social vulnerability is a known factor in perinatal medical risk, both for the foetus and the mother. As part of the French confidential enquiry into maternal deaths, the introduction in 2015 of specific items relating to social status has made it possible to recreate this composite variable. Over the period 2016-2018, one woman in three who died was in a situation of social vulnerability. Of these 79 deaths, 32 (41%) were related to direct obstetric causes, 26 (33%) to indirect obstetric causes, 12 (15%) to suicides and 8 (10%) of unknown cause. Care was considered sub-optimal in 73% of cases, compared with 64% in the group of maternal deaths with no identified social vulnerability. 43 deaths were judged to be probably (n=12) or possibly (n=31) avoidable, 25 were not avoidable, and 11 were not sufficiently documented for this assessment; i.e. a proportion of 63% of probable or possible avoidability, a higher proportion compared with the 56% of avoidability among women with no identified social vulnerability. In 1/3 of maternal deaths, a lack of interaction between the woman and the healthcare system was involved in the chain of events leading to death, i.e. 2 times more than in the case of socially non-vulnerable women. Improving the interaction of women in socially vulnerable situations with the hospital system and the institutional and voluntary networks providing care, support and assistance is a priority. A specific, responsive medical and social organisation could contribute to this.


Subject(s)
Maternal Death , Suicide , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Maternal Mortality , Maternal Death/etiology , France/epidemiology , Risk Factors
3.
Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health ; 36(6): 1487-95, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16610651

ABSTRACT

In 1998, circulation of the Rift Valley Fever (RVF) virus was revealed in Diawara by detection of IgM antibodies in sheep and isolation of the virus from mosquitoes caught outside a village. A seroprevalence study was carried out. Finger-prick blood samples, individual and collective details were obtained. One thousand five hundred twenty people (6 months - 83 years) were included. Overall prevalence in this group was approximately 5.2%. The prevalence in infants (6 months - 2 years) was 8.5%. Age, gender, contact with a pond, presence of sheep, and abortion among sheep, and individual or collective travel history were not statistically associated with prevalence. Prevalence increased significantly when the distance to a small ravine, located in the middle of the village, decreased. The results suggest a low, recent, not endemic circulation of the virus. Culex quinquefasciatus was captured near the ravine. This mosquito, similar to Culex pipiens, can play a similar role in human-to-human transmission of the RVF virus.


Subject(s)
Rift Valley Fever/epidemiology , Rift Valley fever virus/isolation & purification , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Animals , Antibodies, Viral/blood , Child , Child, Preschool , Cross-Sectional Studies , Culex , Female , Health Surveys , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Insect Vectors , Male , Middle Aged , Rift Valley Fever/immunology , Rift Valley fever virus/immunology , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Senegal/epidemiology , Seroepidemiologic Studies , Sheep
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