TY - JOUR
T1 - Transmission of epidemic Vibrio cholerae O1 in rural western Kenya associated with drinking water from Lake Victoria: An environmental reservoir for cholera?: An environmental reservoir for cholera?
AU - Shapiro, Roger L.
AU - Otieno, Muga R.
AU - Adcock, Penny M.
AU - Phillips-Howard, Penelope
AU - Hawley, William A.
AU - Kumar, Lata
AU - Waiyaki, Peter
AU - Nahlen, Bernard L.
AU - Slutsker, Laurence
AU - Mintz, Eric
AU - Hutwagner, Lori
AU - Ouma, Caleb
AU - Onyango, Michael
AU - Alaii, Jane
AU - Yongo, William
AU - Okullo, Johnson
AU - Okech, Richard
AU - Oluoch, Nicholas
AU - Oginga, Tobias
AU - Akuku, Judith Atieno
AU - Wanga, Rosemary
AU - Ochieng, John Benjamin
AU - Odhiambo, Sophie A.
AU - Orure, Joseph
AU - Molge, Helen
AU - Ondieki, Thomas N.
AU - Agwanda, Maurice O.
AU - Shoute, Eric
AU - Ochola, George
AU - Otieno, Julius
AU - Obel, John
PY - 1999/2/1
Y1 - 1999/2/1
N2 - Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest reported cholera incidence and mortality rates in the world. In 1997, a cholera epidemic occurred in western Kenya. Between June 1997 and March 1998, 14,275 cholera admissions to hospitals in Nyanza Province in western Kenya were reported. There were 547 deaths (case fatality rate = 4%). Of 31 Vibrio cholerae O1 isolates tested, all but one were sensitive to tetracycline. We performed a case-control study among 61 cholera patients and age-, sex-, and clinic-matched controls. Multivariate analysis showed that risk factors for cholera were drinking water from Lake Victoria or from a stream, sharing food with a person with watery diarrhea, and attending funeral feasts. Compared with other diarrheal pathogens, cholera was more common among persons living in a village bordering Lake Victoria. Cholera has become an important public health concern in western Kenya, and may become an endemic pathogen in the region.
AB - Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest reported cholera incidence and mortality rates in the world. In 1997, a cholera epidemic occurred in western Kenya. Between June 1997 and March 1998, 14,275 cholera admissions to hospitals in Nyanza Province in western Kenya were reported. There were 547 deaths (case fatality rate = 4%). Of 31 Vibrio cholerae O1 isolates tested, all but one were sensitive to tetracycline. We performed a case-control study among 61 cholera patients and age-, sex-, and clinic-matched controls. Multivariate analysis showed that risk factors for cholera were drinking water from Lake Victoria or from a stream, sharing food with a person with watery diarrhea, and attending funeral feasts. Compared with other diarrheal pathogens, cholera was more common among persons living in a village bordering Lake Victoria. Cholera has become an important public health concern in western Kenya, and may become an endemic pathogen in the region.
U2 - 10.4269/ajtmh.1999.60.271
DO - 10.4269/ajtmh.1999.60.271
M3 - Article
VL - 60
SP - 271
EP - 276
JO - The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
JF - The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
IS - 2
ER -