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Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey

BACKGROUND: The design and development of school health programmes will require information at demographic characteristics of schoolchildren and the major health burdens of the school-age group, the opportunities for intervention and the appropriateness of the available infrastructure. This study ai...

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Autores principales: Ulukanligil, Mustafa, Seyrek, Adnan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC200976/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12952553
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-3-29
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author Ulukanligil, Mustafa
Seyrek, Adnan
author_facet Ulukanligil, Mustafa
Seyrek, Adnan
author_sort Ulukanligil, Mustafa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The design and development of school health programmes will require information at demographic characteristics of schoolchildren and the major health burdens of the school-age group, the opportunities for intervention and the appropriateness of the available infrastructure. This study aims to analyse demographic and parasitic infections status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa province of south-eastern Turkey. METHOD: Three primary schools were randomly selected in the shantytown, apartment and rural districts. A total of 1820 schoolchildren between 7–14 years age were took part to the survey of whom 1120 (61.5%) were boys and 700 (38.4%) were girls. A child form (including child's name, sex, age, school grade and parasitic infections) and school survey form (including condition of water supply, condition of latrines, presence of soaps on the basins and presence of garbage piles around to the schools) were used for demographic, parasitic and sanitary surveys. Stool samples were examined by cellophane thick smear technique for the eggs of intestinal helminths. RESULTS: The demographic survey showed that number of schoolchildren was gradually decreased as their age's increase in shantytown school. The sex ratio was proportional until the second grade, after which the number of females gradually decreased in children in shantytown and rural schools while, in apartment area, schoolchildren was proportionally distributed between age groups and gender even the high-grade students. The prevalence of helminthic infections was %77.1 of the schoolchildren in shantytown, 53.2% in apartment district and 53.1% of rural area. Ascaris lumbricoides was the most prevalent species and followed by Trichuris trichiura, Hymenolepis nana and Taenia species in three schools. Sanitation survey indicated that the tap water was limited in shantytown school, toilet's sanitation was poor, available no soaps on lavatories and garbage piles were accumulated around the schools in shantytown and rural area, while, the school in apartment area was well sanitised. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicated that burden of parasitic infections and poor sanitation conditions constituted public health importance among to the shantytown schoolchildren. School health programmes including deworming and sanitation activities through the health education and improvement of sanitation conditions in the schools have a potential to better health and education for schoolchildren. These programmes also offer the potential to reach significant numbers of population in the shantytown schools with high level of absenteeism.
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spelling pubmed-2009762003-09-30 Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey Ulukanligil, Mustafa Seyrek, Adnan BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: The design and development of school health programmes will require information at demographic characteristics of schoolchildren and the major health burdens of the school-age group, the opportunities for intervention and the appropriateness of the available infrastructure. This study aims to analyse demographic and parasitic infections status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa province of south-eastern Turkey. METHOD: Three primary schools were randomly selected in the shantytown, apartment and rural districts. A total of 1820 schoolchildren between 7–14 years age were took part to the survey of whom 1120 (61.5%) were boys and 700 (38.4%) were girls. A child form (including child's name, sex, age, school grade and parasitic infections) and school survey form (including condition of water supply, condition of latrines, presence of soaps on the basins and presence of garbage piles around to the schools) were used for demographic, parasitic and sanitary surveys. Stool samples were examined by cellophane thick smear technique for the eggs of intestinal helminths. RESULTS: The demographic survey showed that number of schoolchildren was gradually decreased as their age's increase in shantytown school. The sex ratio was proportional until the second grade, after which the number of females gradually decreased in children in shantytown and rural schools while, in apartment area, schoolchildren was proportionally distributed between age groups and gender even the high-grade students. The prevalence of helminthic infections was %77.1 of the schoolchildren in shantytown, 53.2% in apartment district and 53.1% of rural area. Ascaris lumbricoides was the most prevalent species and followed by Trichuris trichiura, Hymenolepis nana and Taenia species in three schools. Sanitation survey indicated that the tap water was limited in shantytown school, toilet's sanitation was poor, available no soaps on lavatories and garbage piles were accumulated around the schools in shantytown and rural area, while, the school in apartment area was well sanitised. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicated that burden of parasitic infections and poor sanitation conditions constituted public health importance among to the shantytown schoolchildren. School health programmes including deworming and sanitation activities through the health education and improvement of sanitation conditions in the schools have a potential to better health and education for schoolchildren. These programmes also offer the potential to reach significant numbers of population in the shantytown schools with high level of absenteeism. BioMed Central 2003-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC200976/ /pubmed/12952553 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-3-29 Text en Copyright © 2003 Ulukanligil and Seyrek; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ulukanligil, Mustafa
Seyrek, Adnan
Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title_full Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title_fullStr Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title_short Demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in Sanliurfa, Turkey
title_sort demographic and parasitic infection status of schoolchildren and sanitary conditions of schools in sanliurfa, turkey
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC200976/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12952553
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-3-29
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