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Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand

Toxoplasma gondii, is one of the infectious agents of congenital TORCH infections, causes severe clinical outcomes in fetus and newborns. Nevertheless this life-threatening parasitic disease is preventable by simple preventive measures related to lifestyle during pregnancy. We aim to study on the kn...

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Autores principales: Andiappan, Hemah, Nissapatorn, Veeranoot, Sawangjaroen, Nongyao, Khaing, Si-Lay, Salibay, Cristina C., Cheung, Mary Mae M., Dungca, Julieta Z., Chemoh, Waenurama, Xiao Teng, Ching, Lau, Yee-Ling, Mat Adenan, Noor A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4052801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24966855
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00291
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author Andiappan, Hemah
Nissapatorn, Veeranoot
Sawangjaroen, Nongyao
Khaing, Si-Lay
Salibay, Cristina C.
Cheung, Mary Mae M.
Dungca, Julieta Z.
Chemoh, Waenurama
Xiao Teng, Ching
Lau, Yee-Ling
Mat Adenan, Noor A.
author_facet Andiappan, Hemah
Nissapatorn, Veeranoot
Sawangjaroen, Nongyao
Khaing, Si-Lay
Salibay, Cristina C.
Cheung, Mary Mae M.
Dungca, Julieta Z.
Chemoh, Waenurama
Xiao Teng, Ching
Lau, Yee-Ling
Mat Adenan, Noor A.
author_sort Andiappan, Hemah
collection PubMed
description Toxoplasma gondii, is one of the infectious agents of congenital TORCH infections, causes severe clinical outcomes in fetus and newborns. Nevertheless this life-threatening parasitic disease is preventable by simple preventive measures related to lifestyle during pregnancy. We aim to study on the knowledge about toxoplasmosis and practices that prevents this infection among the pregnant women. Total of 2598 pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand were randomly surveyed to determine the knowledge and their practices on Toxoplasma infection. The questionnaire covered respondents' general information and knowledge on plausible risks factors, symptoms, timing of infection, prevention knowledge, and preventive behavior regarding Toxoplasma infection. Majority of these pregnant women were in their age group of 20–29 years (50.9%), completed secondary level of education (51.7%), in their second trimester of pregnancies (38.1%), non-parous (36.6%), and had no history of abortion (90.4%). Based on this survey, only 11% of these pregnant women had read, heard, or seen information regarding toxoplasmosis and 3.5% of them were aware of being tested for the infection. A small percentage of these pregnant women knew that T. gondii were shed in the feces of infected cats (19.4%) and sometimes found in the raw or undercooked meat (11.0%). There was 16.1% of responding women knew that toxoplasmosis is caused by an infection. Demographic profiles such as age group, level of education, pregnancy term, and number of children of the pregnant women showed significant association with their responses toward prevention knowledge and preventive behavior related questions (P < 0.05). Thus, it is suggested that health education on toxoplasmosis and primary behavioral practices should be consistently offered to reproductive age women in general and pregnant women in particular. This information could help to reduce vertical transmission of Toxoplasma infection during pregnancy.
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spelling pubmed-40528012014-06-25 Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand Andiappan, Hemah Nissapatorn, Veeranoot Sawangjaroen, Nongyao Khaing, Si-Lay Salibay, Cristina C. Cheung, Mary Mae M. Dungca, Julieta Z. Chemoh, Waenurama Xiao Teng, Ching Lau, Yee-Ling Mat Adenan, Noor A. Front Microbiol Immunology Toxoplasma gondii, is one of the infectious agents of congenital TORCH infections, causes severe clinical outcomes in fetus and newborns. Nevertheless this life-threatening parasitic disease is preventable by simple preventive measures related to lifestyle during pregnancy. We aim to study on the knowledge about toxoplasmosis and practices that prevents this infection among the pregnant women. Total of 2598 pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand were randomly surveyed to determine the knowledge and their practices on Toxoplasma infection. The questionnaire covered respondents' general information and knowledge on plausible risks factors, symptoms, timing of infection, prevention knowledge, and preventive behavior regarding Toxoplasma infection. Majority of these pregnant women were in their age group of 20–29 years (50.9%), completed secondary level of education (51.7%), in their second trimester of pregnancies (38.1%), non-parous (36.6%), and had no history of abortion (90.4%). Based on this survey, only 11% of these pregnant women had read, heard, or seen information regarding toxoplasmosis and 3.5% of them were aware of being tested for the infection. A small percentage of these pregnant women knew that T. gondii were shed in the feces of infected cats (19.4%) and sometimes found in the raw or undercooked meat (11.0%). There was 16.1% of responding women knew that toxoplasmosis is caused by an infection. Demographic profiles such as age group, level of education, pregnancy term, and number of children of the pregnant women showed significant association with their responses toward prevention knowledge and preventive behavior related questions (P < 0.05). Thus, it is suggested that health education on toxoplasmosis and primary behavioral practices should be consistently offered to reproductive age women in general and pregnant women in particular. This information could help to reduce vertical transmission of Toxoplasma infection during pregnancy. Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4052801/ /pubmed/24966855 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00291 Text en Copyright © 2014 Andiappan, Nissapatorn, Sawangjaroen, Khaing, Salibay, Cheung, Dungca, Chemoh, Xiao Teng, Lau and Mat Adenan. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Andiappan, Hemah
Nissapatorn, Veeranoot
Sawangjaroen, Nongyao
Khaing, Si-Lay
Salibay, Cristina C.
Cheung, Mary Mae M.
Dungca, Julieta Z.
Chemoh, Waenurama
Xiao Teng, Ching
Lau, Yee-Ling
Mat Adenan, Noor A.
Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title_full Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title_fullStr Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title_short Knowledge and practice on Toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand
title_sort knowledge and practice on toxoplasma infection in pregnant women from malaysia, philippines, and thailand
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4052801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24966855
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00291
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