The impact of multiple infections and community knowledge on engagement with a historical deworming programme: hookworm and Ascaris in Jamaica, 1913-1936.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Pub Date : 2025-06-05 DOI:10.1093/trstmh/traf010
Jonathan David Roberts, Lorna L Waddington, Rupert J Quinnell, Alison M Dunn
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Abstract

Introduction: Community engagement with public health efforts often depends on existing knowledge of a health issue.

Methods: Here, qualitative analysis of archival material from the Jamaica Hookworm Commission (1919-1936) and quantitative analysis of prevalence data are used to assess knowledge of and ecological interactions between different helminths during a historical hookworm eradication campaign.

Results: Archival sources demonstrate that Jamaicans were familiar with Ascaris lumbricoides. Surveys revealed a high prevalence of hookworm (62% of individuals infected), Ascaris (30%) and Trichuris trichiura (32%) in communities targeted for hookworm control. Community prevalence of Trichuris was positively associated with the prevalence of Ascaris and hookworm. Many individuals were infected with more than one parasite. At an individual level, data from hospital patients and soldiers showed significant associations between all three parasites. The co-occurrence of hookworm and Ascaris, alongside folk treatment of Ascaris with the same plant used by the Hookworm Commission (Chenopodium ambrisoides) to treat hookworm, made biomedical claims about hookworm credible and biomedical treatment more acceptable. Expulsions of Ascaris following treatment also provided dramatic proof of the effectiveness of treatment, further facilitating engagement.

Discussion/conclusion: Knowledge of Ascaris and other helminths directly shaped engagement with hookworm treatment, demonstrating how folk medical knowledge, grounded in the biology of the worms, aided a biomedical public health program.

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多重感染和社区知识对参与历史驱虫规划的影响:牙买加钩虫和蛔虫,1913-1936。
社区参与公共卫生工作往往取决于对卫生问题的现有知识。方法:本文采用牙买加钩虫委员会(1919-1936)档案资料的定性分析和流行数据的定量分析来评估历史上一次钩虫根除运动中不同蠕虫之间的知识和生态相互作用。结果:档案资料显示牙买加人熟悉类蛔虫。调查显示,在防治钩虫的目标社区,钩虫(感染个体的62%)、蛔虫(30%)和Trichuris trichiura(32%)的流行率很高。滴虫的社区流行率与蛔虫和钩虫的流行率呈正相关。许多人感染了不止一种寄生虫。在个人层面上,来自医院病人和士兵的数据显示,这三种寄生虫之间存在显著关联。钩虫和蛔虫的共存,加上民间用钩虫委员会用来治疗钩虫的同一种植物(Chenopodium ambrisoides)治疗蛔虫,使得钩虫的生物医学主张可信,生物医学治疗更容易被接受。治疗后蛔虫的驱逐也为治疗的有效性提供了有力的证据,进一步促进了接触。讨论/结论:关于蛔虫和其他蠕虫的知识直接影响了钩虫的治疗,展示了以蠕虫生物学为基础的民间医学知识如何帮助生物医学公共卫生计划。
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来源期刊
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
9.10%
发文量
115
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene publishes authoritative and impactful original, peer-reviewed articles and reviews on all aspects of tropical medicine.
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