Calculation of the age of the first infection for skin sores and scabies in five remote communities in northern Australia
Date
2018
Authors
Lydeamore, M.J.
Campbell, Patricia T.
Cuningham, W
Andrews, Ross
Kearns, Therese
Clucas, D.
Dhurrkay, R. Gundjirryirr
Carapetis, J
Tong, Steven
McCaw, James
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Prevalence of skin sores and scabies in remote Australian Aboriginal communities remains unacceptably high, with Group A Streptococcus (GAS) the dominant pathogen. We aim to better understand the drivers of GAS transmission using mathematical models. To estimate the force of infection, we quantified the age of first skin sores and scabies infection by pooling historical data from three studies conducted across five remote Aboriginal communities for children born between 2001 and 2005. We estimated the age of the first infection using the Kaplan–Meier estimator; parametric exponential mixture model; and Cox proportional hazards. For skin sores, the mean age of the first infection was approximately 10 months and the median was 7 months, with some heterogeneity in median observed by the community. For scabies, the mean age of the first infection was approximately 9 months and the median was 8 months, with significant heterogeneity by the community and an enhanced risk for children born between October and December. The young age of the first infection with skin sores and scabies reflects the high disease burden in these communities.
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Keywords
Skin Sores, scabies, northern territory, Aboriginal health, age of first infection
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Source
Epidemiology and Infection
Type
Journal article
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Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International)
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