One Health Disparities and Blastocystis infection among smallholder farmers in northeastern Madagascar
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Abstract
<jats:p><jats:italic>Blastocystis</jats:italic> is a globally transmitted gastrointestinal protozoa that commonly infects people living in low- and middle-income countries. Transmission is thought to occur via consumption of contaminated water or food and through contact with infected animals, although the specific factors that influence infection in low-resource, rural settings remain unclear. We applied a One Health Disparities framework that considers the interconnectedness of human, nonhuman animal, and environmental health to investigate disparities in <jats:italic>Blastocystis</jats:italic> spp. infection in rural northeastern Madagascar. We focused on a suite of predictors including wealth, animal contact, hand hygiene, and demographic factors. Overall, 76.5% of 783 participants were infected with at least one of three subtypes of <jats:italic>Blastocystis</jats:italic>, and 19% of people were co-infected with two or more subtypes (ST1, 2, and 3). We found that men had lower risk of infection than women, while individuals who reported washing their hands without soap had higher odds of infection across all subtypes. Within a single subtype, soap-use remained significant for both ST1 and ST2, while for ST3, the effect of gender remained significant. Wealth and animal interactions had no significant associations with infection. Our study sheds light on gender disparities and the importance of hand hygiene in explaining variation in <jats:italic>Blastocystis</jats:italic> infection in rural Madagascar, while failing to support hypotheses based on socioeconomic status and exposure to domesticated animal reservoirs of disease. The findings also underscore the importance of gastrointestinal infections in vulnerable rural populations in Madagascar and highlight ways to address health equity and environmental justice in rural, low-resource settings.</jats:p>
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Solis, Alma, Angela Anaeme, Georgia Titcomb, Mark Janko, Jean Yves Rabezara, Tyler M Barrett, Kayla Kauffman, Michelle Pender, et al. (n.d.). One Health Disparities and Blastocystis infection among smallholder farmers in northeastern Madagascar. PLOS Global Public Health, 5(10). pp. e0005189–e0005189. 10.1371/journal.pgph.0005189 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33429.
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Scholars@Duke
Tyler Barrett
Tyler Barrett is a Postdoctoral Associate with the Amazon Research Consortium for Climate Change and One Health at the Duke Global Health Institute. His research focuses on rural livelihoods, human mobility, and infectious disease transmission in the context of global environmental change. Barrett approaches these topics through a mix of computational, lab, and field-based methods and his work is currently based in Madagascar and in countries throughout Latin America. He completed his doctoral training in Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University and holds an MA in Anthropology from Northwestern University.
Lev Kolinski
Education:
- Washington University in St. Louis, BA Anthropology (2017-2021)
- Duke University, PhD (2023-present)
Randall Kramer
Before coming to Duke in 1988, he was on the faculty at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He has held visiting positions at IUCN--The World Conservation Union, the Economic Growth Center at Yale University, and the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry. He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, World Health Organization and other international organizations. He was named Duke University's Scholar Teacher of the Year in 2004.
Kramer's research is focused on the economics of ecosystem services and on global environmental health. He is currently conducting a study on the effects of human land use decisions on biodiversity, infectious disease transmission and human health in rural Madagascar. Recent research projects have used decision analysis and implementation science to evaluate the health, social and environmental impacts of alternative malaria control strategies in East Africa. He has also conducted research on health systems strengthening, economic valuation of lives saved from air pollution reduction. and the role of ecosystems services in protecting human health.
Charles L Nunn
Charles Nunn is the Gosnell Family Professor of Global Health and Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University. He is also the Director of the Triangle Center for Evolutionary Medicine (TriCEM). Nunn uses evolutionary approaches to understand and improve human and animal health. He and his research group investigate the ecology and evolution of infectious disease, climate change and health, and evolutionary medicine. Nunn addresses these questions using phylogenetic methods, mathematical modeling, and through fieldwork in Madagascar, Kenya and other locations. In his current research in Madagascar, Nunn and his team are investigating the early stages of pandemics by modeling the connections between humans and animals, among people within a community, and between communities. They are also investigating a wide range of existing and new infectious diseases in this system, the effects of climate change on health, and the role of agricultural crops, particularly vanilla, on human health and disease. Nunn is the author of Infectious Diseases of Primates: Behavior, Ecology and Evolution and The Comparative Approach in Evolutionary Anthropology and Biology. He is currently writing a textbook on Evolutionary Medicine and Global Health.
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