Poor sanitation could pose greater risk for enteric pathogen transmission at higher human population densities because of greater potential for pathogens to infect new hosts through environmentally mediated and person-to-person transmission.We hypothesized that incidence and prevalence of diarrhea, enteric protozoans, and soil-transmitted helminth infections would be higher in high-population-density areas compared with low-population-density areas, and that poor sanitation would pose greater risk for these enteric infections at high density compared with low density. We tested our hypotheses using 6 years of clinic-based diarrhea surveillance (2007-2013) including 4,360 geolocated diarrhea cases tested for 13 pathogens and a 2010 cross-sectional survey that measured environmental exposures from 204 households (920 people) and tested 701 stool specimens for enteric parasites. We found that population density was not a key determinant of enteric infection nor a strong effect modifier of risk posed by poor household sanitation in this setting.
CITATION STYLE
Jarquin, C., Arnold, B. F., Muñoz, F., Lopez, B., Cuéllar, V. M., Thornton, A., … Colford, J. M. (2016). Population density, poor sanitation, and enteric infections in Nueva Santa Rosa, Guatemala. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 94(4), 912–919. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.15-0555
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.