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The Central African journal of medicine 2000-Jun

An outbreak of dysentery in a rural district of Zimbabwe: the role of personal hygiene at public gatherings.

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S M Midzi
M Tshimanga
S Siziya
T Marufu
E T Mabiza

Palabras clave

Abstracto

OBJECTIVE

To characterize the nature and extent of the outbreak; to determine the risk factors associated with contracting shigellosis; and to institute disease control and preventive measures.

METHODS

Case control study.

METHODS

Nyaure Ward, Goromonzi District, Mashonaland East Province, Zimbabwe.

METHODS

52 cases and 52 controls. A case was defined as any resident of Nyaure Ward who presented with bloody diarrhoea (three or more loose stools/day) between 25 July and 25 October 1997.

METHODS

Frequencies of symptoms, types of treatment received, risk factors for contracting the illness.

RESULTS

The median age was 17 (Q1 = 8, Q3 = 30) years for cases and 19 (Q1 = 7, Q3 = 28) years for controls. Prominent symptoms were abdominal cramps (96.2%), malaise and fever (92.3%), nausea and vomiting (50.0%). The median duration of diarrhoea was 13 (Q1 = 6, Q3 = 14) days. Eighteen (34.6%) cases were admitted and of these five were referred to a central hospital and two of them complicated with haemolytic uraemic syndrome. The case fatality rate was 1.6%. Twenty four(46.1%) of the cases had Shigella dysenteriae type I, sensitive to Nalidixic acid, Kanamycin, and Doxycycline but resistant to Metronidazole, isolated from the stool specimen. Water samples did not yield any pathogens. Significant risk factors associated with contracting dysentery were shared hand washing in the same standing water at gatherings[OR = 8.47, 95% CI: (2.43-31.33)] or within homes[OR = 60.43, 95% CI: (15.73 to 256.00)]. The use of Blair toilets was a protective factor[OR = 0.03, 95% CI: (0.01 to 0.11)].

CONCLUSIONS

The epidemiologic evidence implicated contamination of water used for shared hand washing before meals as the source of the infection. The common practice of shared hand washing in standing water should be discouraged at all gatherings and within households to avoid future outbreaks.

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