TY - JOUR KW - Infectious Diseases KW - Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health KW - General Medicine KW - Trichuris infection KW - global prevalence KW - intensity KW - systematic review KW - meta-analysis AU - Behniafar H AU - Sepidarkish M AU - Tadi MJ AU - Valizadeh S AU - Gholamrezaei M AU - Hamidi F AU - Pazoki H AU - Alizadeh F AU - Kianifard N AU - Nooshabadi MS AU - Bagheri K AU - Hemmati F AU - Hemmati T AU - Tori NA AU - Siddiq A AU - Rostami A AB -

This systematic review and meta-analysis study aimed to evaluate global Trichuris infection prevalence, assessing progress towards the WHO's 2030 target. We searched international databases from 2010–2023, categorizing data by regions and socio-economic variables using a random-effects model. Analyzing 757 articles covering 7,154,842 individuals from 78 countries, the study found a pooled global prevalence of (6.64%–7.57%), with the highest rates in the Caribbean (21.72%; 8.90–38.18%) and South-East Asia (20.95; 15.71–26.71%) regions. Southern Africa (9.58; 2.11–21.46%), Latin America (9.58; 2.11–21.46%), and Middle Africa Middle Africa (8.94; 6.31–11.98%) also exhibited high prevalence. Eastern Europe had the lowest prevalence at 0.16% (0.09–0.24). Approximately 513 (480–547) million people worldwide were estimated to harbor Trichuris. Moreover ~1.5% of people tested worldwide (2010-2023) had a moderate to heavy intensity of infection. The study emphasizes the persistent global health threat of Trichuris infection, urging tailored strategies for effective control and prevention on a global scale.

BT - Journal of Infection and Public Health DO - 10.1016/j.jiph.2024.03.005 LA - Eng N2 -

This systematic review and meta-analysis study aimed to evaluate global Trichuris infection prevalence, assessing progress towards the WHO's 2030 target. We searched international databases from 2010–2023, categorizing data by regions and socio-economic variables using a random-effects model. Analyzing 757 articles covering 7,154,842 individuals from 78 countries, the study found a pooled global prevalence of (6.64%–7.57%), with the highest rates in the Caribbean (21.72%; 8.90–38.18%) and South-East Asia (20.95; 15.71–26.71%) regions. Southern Africa (9.58; 2.11–21.46%), Latin America (9.58; 2.11–21.46%), and Middle Africa Middle Africa (8.94; 6.31–11.98%) also exhibited high prevalence. Eastern Europe had the lowest prevalence at 0.16% (0.09–0.24). Approximately 513 (480–547) million people worldwide were estimated to harbor Trichuris. Moreover ~1.5% of people tested worldwide (2010-2023) had a moderate to heavy intensity of infection. The study emphasizes the persistent global health threat of Trichuris infection, urging tailored strategies for effective control and prevention on a global scale.

PB - Elsevier BV PY - 2024 SP - 1 EP - 22 T2 - Journal of Infection and Public Health TI - The global prevalence of Trichuris trichiura infection in humans (2010-2023): A systematic review and meta-analysis UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S187603412400056X/pdfft?md5=bce43bbb070cb33f4fcf7aac3d287d84&pid=1-s2.0-S187603412400056X-main.pdf SN - 1876-0341 ER -