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Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo

INTRODUCTION: Skin neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), are endemic and under-diagnosed in many lower-income communities. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of skin NTDs and fungal infections in two primary schools and a community setting in rural Togo. METHOD: This was a cro...

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Autores principales: Saka, Bayaki, Kassang, Panawé, Gnossike, Piham, Head, Michael G., Akakpo, Abla Séfako, Teclessou, Julienne Noude, Elegbede, Yvette Moise, Mouhari-Toure, Abas, Mahamadou, Garba, Tevi, Kokoé, Katsou, Kafouyema, Kombaté, Koussake, Walker, Stephen L., Pitché, Palokinam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9810153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36534701
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010697
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author Saka, Bayaki
Kassang, Panawé
Gnossike, Piham
Head, Michael G.
Akakpo, Abla Séfako
Teclessou, Julienne Noude
Elegbede, Yvette Moise
Mouhari-Toure, Abas
Mahamadou, Garba
Tevi, Kokoé
Katsou, Kafouyema
Kombaté, Koussake
Walker, Stephen L.
Pitché, Palokinam
author_facet Saka, Bayaki
Kassang, Panawé
Gnossike, Piham
Head, Michael G.
Akakpo, Abla Séfako
Teclessou, Julienne Noude
Elegbede, Yvette Moise
Mouhari-Toure, Abas
Mahamadou, Garba
Tevi, Kokoé
Katsou, Kafouyema
Kombaté, Koussake
Walker, Stephen L.
Pitché, Palokinam
author_sort Saka, Bayaki
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Skin neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), are endemic and under-diagnosed in many lower-income communities. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of skin NTDs and fungal infections in two primary schools and a community setting in rural Togo. METHOD: This was a cross-sectional study that took place between June-October 2021. The two primary schools are located on the outskirts of Lomé, the capital city. The community setting was Ndjéi, in north-east Togo. Study sites were purposively selected. Dermatologists examined the skin of study participants. Diagnosis of skin NTDs were made clinically. RESULTS: A total of 1401 individuals were examined, 954 (68.1%) from Ndjéi community, and 447 (31.9%) were children in the schools. Cutaneous skin infections were diagnosed in 438 (31.3%) participants, of whom 355 (81%) were in community settings. There were 105 observed skin NTDs (7.5%). Within the school setting, there were 20 individuals with NTDs (4.5% of 447 participants), and 85 NTDs (8.9%) from 954 community participants. Across all settings 68/1020 (6.7%) NTDs were in children, and 37/381 (9.7%) in adults. In addition, there were 333 observed mycoses (23.8% prevalence). The main cutaneous NTDs diagnosed were scabies (n = 86; 6.1%) and suspected yaws (n = 16, 1.1%). The prevalence of scabies in schools was 4.3%, and 7.0% in the rural community. One case of leprosy was diagnosed in each school and the rural community, and one suspected Buruli Ulcer case in the community. In the school setting, five (6%) children with a skin NTD reported being stigmatised, four of whom had refused to attend school because of their dermatosis. In Ndjéi, 44 (4.6%) individuals reported having experienced stigma and 41 (93.2%) of them missed at least one day of school or work. CONCLUSION: This study shows that the burden of scabies and skin infections such as superficial mycoses is high in the school and rural community settings in Togo, with associated presence of stigma. Improved health promotion and education across institutional and community settings may reduce stigma and encourage early reporting of skin infection cases to a health facility.
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spelling pubmed-98101532023-01-04 Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo Saka, Bayaki Kassang, Panawé Gnossike, Piham Head, Michael G. Akakpo, Abla Séfako Teclessou, Julienne Noude Elegbede, Yvette Moise Mouhari-Toure, Abas Mahamadou, Garba Tevi, Kokoé Katsou, Kafouyema Kombaté, Koussake Walker, Stephen L. Pitché, Palokinam PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article INTRODUCTION: Skin neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), are endemic and under-diagnosed in many lower-income communities. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of skin NTDs and fungal infections in two primary schools and a community setting in rural Togo. METHOD: This was a cross-sectional study that took place between June-October 2021. The two primary schools are located on the outskirts of Lomé, the capital city. The community setting was Ndjéi, in north-east Togo. Study sites were purposively selected. Dermatologists examined the skin of study participants. Diagnosis of skin NTDs were made clinically. RESULTS: A total of 1401 individuals were examined, 954 (68.1%) from Ndjéi community, and 447 (31.9%) were children in the schools. Cutaneous skin infections were diagnosed in 438 (31.3%) participants, of whom 355 (81%) were in community settings. There were 105 observed skin NTDs (7.5%). Within the school setting, there were 20 individuals with NTDs (4.5% of 447 participants), and 85 NTDs (8.9%) from 954 community participants. Across all settings 68/1020 (6.7%) NTDs were in children, and 37/381 (9.7%) in adults. In addition, there were 333 observed mycoses (23.8% prevalence). The main cutaneous NTDs diagnosed were scabies (n = 86; 6.1%) and suspected yaws (n = 16, 1.1%). The prevalence of scabies in schools was 4.3%, and 7.0% in the rural community. One case of leprosy was diagnosed in each school and the rural community, and one suspected Buruli Ulcer case in the community. In the school setting, five (6%) children with a skin NTD reported being stigmatised, four of whom had refused to attend school because of their dermatosis. In Ndjéi, 44 (4.6%) individuals reported having experienced stigma and 41 (93.2%) of them missed at least one day of school or work. CONCLUSION: This study shows that the burden of scabies and skin infections such as superficial mycoses is high in the school and rural community settings in Togo, with associated presence of stigma. Improved health promotion and education across institutional and community settings may reduce stigma and encourage early reporting of skin infection cases to a health facility. Public Library of Science 2022-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9810153/ /pubmed/36534701 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010697 Text en © 2022 Saka et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Saka, Bayaki
Kassang, Panawé
Gnossike, Piham
Head, Michael G.
Akakpo, Abla Séfako
Teclessou, Julienne Noude
Elegbede, Yvette Moise
Mouhari-Toure, Abas
Mahamadou, Garba
Tevi, Kokoé
Katsou, Kafouyema
Kombaté, Koussake
Walker, Stephen L.
Pitché, Palokinam
Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title_full Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title_fullStr Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title_short Prevalence of skin Neglected Tropical Diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in Togo
title_sort prevalence of skin neglected tropical diseases and superficial fungal infections in two peri-urban schools and one rural community setting in togo
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9810153/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36534701
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010697
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