Publication:
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Infections and Their Relationships With Regional and Socioeconomic Statuses: An ID-IRI Survey in 24 Countries of Europe, Africa and Asia

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Background: In this cross-sectional, international study, we aimed to analyze vector-borne and zoonotic infections (VBZI), which are significant global threats. Method: VBZIs' data between May 20-28, 2018 was collected. The 24 Participatingcountries were classified as lower-middle, upper-middle, and high-income. Results: 382 patients were included. 175(45.8%) were hospitalized, most commonly in Croatia, Egypt, and Romania(P = 0.001). There was a significant difference between distributions of VBZIs according to geographical regions(P < 0.001). Amebiasis, Ancylostomiasis, Blastocystosis, Cryptosporidiosis, Giardiasis, Toxoplasmosis were significantly more common in the Middle-East while Bartonellosis, Borreliosis, Cat Scratch Disease, Hantavirus syndrome, Rickettsiosis, Campylobacteriosis, Salmonellosis in Central/East/South-East Europe; Brucellosis and Echinococcosis in Central/West Asia; Campylobacteriosis, Chikungunya, Tick-borne encephalitis, Visceral Leishmaniasis, Salmonellosis, Toxoplasmosis in the North-Mediterranean; CCHF, Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, Dengue, Malaria, Taeniasis, Salmonellosis in Indian Subcontinent; Lassa Fever in West Africa. There were significant regional differences for viral hemorrhagic fevers(P < 0.001) and tick-borne infections(P < 0.001), and according to economic status for VBZIs(P < 0.001). The prevalences of VBZIs were significantly higher in lower-middle income countries(P = 0.001). The most similar regions were the Indian Subcontinent and the Middle-East, the Indian Subcontinent and the North-Mediterranean, and the Middle-East and North Mediterranean regions. Conclusions: Regional and socioeconomic heterogeneity still exists for VBZIs. Control and eradication of VBZIs require evidence-based surveillance data, and multidisciplinary efforts.

Description

Mahboob, Amjad/0000-0003-2211-5346; Evren, Hakan/0000-0001-8247-8144; Erdem, Hakan/0000-0002-6265-5227; Cernat, Roxana/0000-0002-0567-4958; Moroti, Ruxana/0000-0002-4453-3752; Arapovic, Jurica/0000-0002-7674-6795; Cascio, Antonio/0000-0002-1992-1796; Ankarali, Handan/0000-0002-3613-0523; Ruch, Yvon/0000-0002-4713-9478; Cag, Yasemin/0000-0002-9983-0308; Rahman, Tanvir/0000-0001-5432-480X; Özer Balın, Şafak/0000-0002-3722-4660; Puca, Edmond/0000-0002-0621-4865; Tokayeva/Tokaeva, Alma/0000-0003-1238-9263; Marino, Anea/0000-0002-5650-6911; Stebel, Roman/0000-0001-6922-4465; Kotsev, Stanislav/0000-0001-8201-0242; El-Sayed, Nagwa/0000-0001-6880-2147; Saydam Bayazıt, Fatma Nurhayat/0000-0001-6414-831X; Meriç Koç, Meliha/0000-0002-0563-6900; Dimzova, Marija/0000-0002-1799-8079; Čivljak, Rok/0000-0001-8766-7438; Cascio, Antonio/0000-0002-1992-1796; Uysal, Serhat/0000-0002-4294-5999; Bozkurt, Ilkay/0000-0002-8425-9719; , Maria Pishmisheva-Peleva/0000-0001-6792-9146; Duisenova, Amangul/0009-0005-5834-1945; Ramadan, Manar/0000-0002-9688-5602;

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1

Source

Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease

Volume

44

Issue

Start Page

End Page

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By