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Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon

Malaria remains a major health problem in Cameroon; It accounts for 38% of consultations, 24% of deaths and 36.8% of absenteeism in the country. The negative economic impact of malaria has encouraged a new control approach targeting companies. In this regard, a cross sectional study was conducted fr...

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Autores principales: Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou, Foko, Loick Pradel Kojom, Nyabeyeu, Hervé Nyabeyeu, Tonga, Calvin, Nono, Larissa Kouodjip, Kangam, Lafortune, Bunda, Godlove Wepnje, Mbou, Isabelle Matip, Ngo Hondt, Etoile Odette, Mbe, Alex Joel Koumbo, Nolla, Nicolas Policarpe, Lehman, Leopold Gustave
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6903749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31821328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225219
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author Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou
Foko, Loick Pradel Kojom
Nyabeyeu, Hervé Nyabeyeu
Tonga, Calvin
Nono, Larissa Kouodjip
Kangam, Lafortune
Bunda, Godlove Wepnje
Mbou, Isabelle Matip
Ngo Hondt, Etoile Odette
Mbe, Alex Joel Koumbo
Nolla, Nicolas Policarpe
Lehman, Leopold Gustave
author_facet Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou
Foko, Loick Pradel Kojom
Nyabeyeu, Hervé Nyabeyeu
Tonga, Calvin
Nono, Larissa Kouodjip
Kangam, Lafortune
Bunda, Godlove Wepnje
Mbou, Isabelle Matip
Ngo Hondt, Etoile Odette
Mbe, Alex Joel Koumbo
Nolla, Nicolas Policarpe
Lehman, Leopold Gustave
author_sort Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou
collection PubMed
description Malaria remains a major health problem in Cameroon; It accounts for 38% of consultations, 24% of deaths and 36.8% of absenteeism in the country. The negative economic impact of malaria has encouraged a new control approach targeting companies. In this regard, a cross sectional study was conducted from February 2015 to June 2017 in 14 companies in the town of Douala. This study aimed at determining the prevalence, control practices of employees and identifying associated factors with malaria. A total of 2705 workers were interviewed and systematically screened for malaria using LED fluorescence microscopy (CyScope®). All positive cases were given a malaria treatment. The prevalence of malaria and asymptomatic malaria was 30.1% and 28.9% respectively; asymptomatic malaria accounted for 95.7% of all positive diagnostic test. Malaria infection was significantly higher in employees aged 36–60 years (30.5%) and having completed primary studies (36%). ITNs ownership and utilization were 86.36% and 77.23% respectively. The risk for malaria infection has significantly decreased with age and educational level while the employees’ level of education and size of households were significantly associated with the regular utilization of ITNs. This is the first study assessing malaria prevalence and risk factors in workplace in Cameroon and using a novel diagnostic tool. This study outlines a high prevalence of malaria infection, especially asymptomatic carriage, high rates of ITNs ownership and utilization, as well as the influence of level of education, age and household size as associated factors. Active case detection of asymptomatic carriers through systematic screening of employees at workplace and their treatment is feasible with the Cyscope microscope and could be a good complement to ongoing control strategies.
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spelling pubmed-69037492019-12-20 Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou Foko, Loick Pradel Kojom Nyabeyeu, Hervé Nyabeyeu Tonga, Calvin Nono, Larissa Kouodjip Kangam, Lafortune Bunda, Godlove Wepnje Mbou, Isabelle Matip Ngo Hondt, Etoile Odette Mbe, Alex Joel Koumbo Nolla, Nicolas Policarpe Lehman, Leopold Gustave PLoS One Research Article Malaria remains a major health problem in Cameroon; It accounts for 38% of consultations, 24% of deaths and 36.8% of absenteeism in the country. The negative economic impact of malaria has encouraged a new control approach targeting companies. In this regard, a cross sectional study was conducted from February 2015 to June 2017 in 14 companies in the town of Douala. This study aimed at determining the prevalence, control practices of employees and identifying associated factors with malaria. A total of 2705 workers were interviewed and systematically screened for malaria using LED fluorescence microscopy (CyScope®). All positive cases were given a malaria treatment. The prevalence of malaria and asymptomatic malaria was 30.1% and 28.9% respectively; asymptomatic malaria accounted for 95.7% of all positive diagnostic test. Malaria infection was significantly higher in employees aged 36–60 years (30.5%) and having completed primary studies (36%). ITNs ownership and utilization were 86.36% and 77.23% respectively. The risk for malaria infection has significantly decreased with age and educational level while the employees’ level of education and size of households were significantly associated with the regular utilization of ITNs. This is the first study assessing malaria prevalence and risk factors in workplace in Cameroon and using a novel diagnostic tool. This study outlines a high prevalence of malaria infection, especially asymptomatic carriage, high rates of ITNs ownership and utilization, as well as the influence of level of education, age and household size as associated factors. Active case detection of asymptomatic carriers through systematic screening of employees at workplace and their treatment is feasible with the Cyscope microscope and could be a good complement to ongoing control strategies. Public Library of Science 2019-12-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6903749/ /pubmed/31821328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225219 Text en © 2019 Mbohou et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mbohou, Christian Nchetnkou
Foko, Loick Pradel Kojom
Nyabeyeu, Hervé Nyabeyeu
Tonga, Calvin
Nono, Larissa Kouodjip
Kangam, Lafortune
Bunda, Godlove Wepnje
Mbou, Isabelle Matip
Ngo Hondt, Etoile Odette
Mbe, Alex Joel Koumbo
Nolla, Nicolas Policarpe
Lehman, Leopold Gustave
Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title_full Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title_fullStr Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title_short Malaria screening at the workplace in Cameroon
title_sort malaria screening at the workplace in cameroon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6903749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31821328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225219
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