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Q fever is an old and neglected zoonotic disease in Kenya: a systematic review
by
Heller, R.
, Pletz, M. W.
, Neubauer, H.
, Henning, K.
, Njeru, J.
in
Animal health
/ Animal populations
/ Animals
/ Biostatistics
/ Camels
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Control programs
/ Coxiella burnetii
/ Disease control
/ Distribution
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Economic factors
/ Embedded systems
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Food contamination & poisoning
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Goats
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Identification methods
/ Infection control
/ Infectious Disease epidemiology
/ Kenya
/ Kenya - epidemiology
/ Laboratories
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Management systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Neglected Diseases - epidemiology
/ Neglected Diseases - prevention & control
/ Pathogens
/ Population studies
/ Populations
/ Prevention
/ Protective clothing
/ Public Health
/ Public health administration
/ Q fever
/ Q Fever - epidemiology
/ Q Fever - prevention & control
/ Research Article
/ Serology
/ Seroprevalence
/ Sheep
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Vaccine
/ Zoonoses
/ Zoonoses - epidemiology
/ Zoonoses - prevention & control
2016
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Q fever is an old and neglected zoonotic disease in Kenya: a systematic review
by
Heller, R.
, Pletz, M. W.
, Neubauer, H.
, Henning, K.
, Njeru, J.
in
Animal health
/ Animal populations
/ Animals
/ Biostatistics
/ Camels
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Control programs
/ Coxiella burnetii
/ Disease control
/ Distribution
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Economic factors
/ Embedded systems
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Food contamination & poisoning
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Goats
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Identification methods
/ Infection control
/ Infectious Disease epidemiology
/ Kenya
/ Kenya - epidemiology
/ Laboratories
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Management systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Neglected Diseases - epidemiology
/ Neglected Diseases - prevention & control
/ Pathogens
/ Population studies
/ Populations
/ Prevention
/ Protective clothing
/ Public Health
/ Public health administration
/ Q fever
/ Q Fever - epidemiology
/ Q Fever - prevention & control
/ Research Article
/ Serology
/ Seroprevalence
/ Sheep
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Vaccine
/ Zoonoses
/ Zoonoses - epidemiology
/ Zoonoses - prevention & control
2016
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Q fever is an old and neglected zoonotic disease in Kenya: a systematic review
by
Heller, R.
, Pletz, M. W.
, Neubauer, H.
, Henning, K.
, Njeru, J.
in
Animal health
/ Animal populations
/ Animals
/ Biostatistics
/ Camels
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Control programs
/ Coxiella burnetii
/ Disease control
/ Distribution
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Economic factors
/ Embedded systems
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Food contamination & poisoning
/ Forecasts and trends
/ Goats
/ Health risk assessment
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Identification methods
/ Infection control
/ Infectious Disease epidemiology
/ Kenya
/ Kenya - epidemiology
/ Laboratories
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Management systems
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Neglected Diseases - epidemiology
/ Neglected Diseases - prevention & control
/ Pathogens
/ Population studies
/ Populations
/ Prevention
/ Protective clothing
/ Public Health
/ Public health administration
/ Q fever
/ Q Fever - epidemiology
/ Q Fever - prevention & control
/ Research Article
/ Serology
/ Seroprevalence
/ Sheep
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Vaccine
/ Zoonoses
/ Zoonoses - epidemiology
/ Zoonoses - prevention & control
2016
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Q fever is an old and neglected zoonotic disease in Kenya: a systematic review
Journal Article
Q fever is an old and neglected zoonotic disease in Kenya: a systematic review
2016
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Overview
Background
Q fever is a neglected zoonosis caused by the bacterium
Coxiella burnetii
. The knowledge of the epidemiology of Q fever in Kenya is limited with no attention to control and prevention programs. The purpose of this review is to understand the situation of Q fever in human and animal populations in Kenya in the past 60 years, and help identify future research priorities for the country.
Methods
Databases were searched for national and international scientific studies or reports on Q fever. We included studies and reports published between 1950 and 2015 if they reported on Q fever prevalence, incidence, and infection control programs in Kenya. Data were extracted with respect to studies on prevalence of
Coxiella
infections, study design, study region, the study populations involved, and sorted according to the year of the study.
Results
We identified 15 studies and reports which qualified for data extraction. Human seroprevalence studies revealed evidence of
C. burnetii
infections ranging from 3 to 35.8 % in all regions in which surveys were made and two Q fever outbreak episodes.
Coxiella burnetii
infections found in cattle 7.4–51.1 %, sheep 6.7–20 %, camels 20–46 %, and goats 20–46 % revealed variation based on ecoregions and the year of study. Farming and lack of protective clothing were associated with increased seropositivity among humans. However, high quality data is lacking on Q fever awareness, underlying cultural-economic factors influencing
C. burnetii
infection, and how the pathogen cycles may be embedded in livestock production and management systems in the economically and ecologically different Kenyan regions. We found no studies on national disease incidence estimates or disease surveillance and control efforts.
Conclusion
Coxiella burnetii
infections are common in human and in a wide range of animal populations but are still unrecognized and underestimated thus presenting a significant human and animal health threat in Kenya. The factors influencing pathogen transmission, persistence and spread are poorly understood. Integrated disease surveillance and prevention/control programs are needed in Kenya.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Animals
/ Camels
/ Food contamination & poisoning
/ Goats
/ Humans
/ Infectious Disease epidemiology
/ Kenya
/ Medicine
/ Methods
/ Neglected Diseases - epidemiology
/ Neglected Diseases - prevention & control
/ Public health administration
/ Q fever
/ Q Fever - prevention & control
/ Serology
/ Sheep
/ Studies
/ Vaccine
/ Zoonoses
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