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Poverty, sanitation, and Leptospira transmission pathways in residents from four Brazilian slums

Hussein Khalil, Roberta Santana, Daiana de Oliveira, Fabiana Almerinda G. Palma, Ricardo Lustosa, Max T. Eyre, Ticiana S. A. Carvalho‐Pereira, Mitermayer Galvão dos Reis, Albert I. Ko, Peter J. Diggle, Yeimi Alexandra Alzate López, Michael Begon, Federico Costa

2021PLoS neglected tropical diseases81 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Residents of urban slums suffer from a high burden of zoonotic diseases due to individual, socioeconomic, and environmental factors. We conducted a cross-sectional sero-survey in four urban slums in Salvador, Brazil, to characterize how poverty and sanitation contribute to the transmission of rat-borne leptospirosis. Sero-prevalence in the 1,318 participants ranged between 10.0 and 13.3%. We found that contact with environmental sources of contamination, rather than presence of rat reservoirs, is what leads to higher risk for residents living in areas with inadequate sanitation. Further, poorer residents may be exposed away from the household, and ongoing governmental interventions were not associated with lower transmission risk. Residents at higher risk were aware of their vulnerability, and their efforts improved the physical environment near their household, but did not reduce their infection chances. This study highlights the importance of understanding the socioeconomic and environmental determinants of risk, which ought to guide intervention efforts.

Topics & Concepts

SanitationEnvironmental healthSocioeconomic statusPovertyTransmission (telecommunications)Psychological interventionVulnerability (computing)Improved sanitationSlumSocioeconomicsGeographyMedicineEconomic growthPopulationComputer scienceEconomicsPsychiatryElectrical engineeringComputer securityEngineeringPathologySociologyLeptospirosis research and findingsViral Infections and VectorsZoonotic diseases and public health
Poverty, sanitation, and Leptospira transmission pathways in residents from four Brazilian slums | Litcius