01755nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001653003800042653002700080653002000107653001200127653001600139653003900155100001500194700000900209700001500218700001800233700002000251700001000271700001300281245015100294520105400445022001401499 2017 d10aSoil-Transmitted Helminths (STHs)10aSocio economic aspects10aschistosomiasis10aPoverty10aPhilippines10aNeglected tropical diseases (NTDs)1 aLiwanag HJ1 aUy J1 aBataller R1 aGatchalian JR1 aDe La Calzada B1 aUy JA1 aDayrit M00aSoil-transmitted helminthiasis and schistosomiasis in children of poor families in Leyte, Philippines: Lessons for disease prevention and control.3 a

OBJECTIVE:  Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) continue to be a public health problem in the Philippines. We assessed the association of soil-transmitted helminthiasis (STH) and schistosomiasis with selected health-related and socioeconomic variables in four villages in Leyte, Philippines.

METHODS:  Stool specimens from 418 adults and 533 of their children from 209 families were examined through the Kato-Katz technique.

RESULTS:  STH and schistosomiasis were present in 64.6% and 12.5%, respectively, of study participants. Analysis through the generalized linear mixed model revealed a number of associations between infection in parents and their children. Findings indicate that years of disease prevention and control efforts in these areas have been unable to bring down prevalence in children and their parents. Eliminating NTDs as public health problems will require a systems thinking approach beyond implementation of vertical control programs alone.

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