Affiliations 

  • 1 Kan S.P., BSc (Hons}, PhD. Associate Professor, Department of Parasitology.
  • 2 Manmohan Singh, BSc, MSc. Lecturer, Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya.
  • 3 Sarjeet Singh. Field Officer, Department of Statistics, Malaysia.
Med J Malaysia, 1987 Mar;42(1):40-3.
PMID: 3431501

Abstract

Only 8.4% of 1,286 Chinese boys and girls from the ages of 5-12 years in Pulau Ketam were infected with soil-transmitted helminths. The majority of these children had single infections with Trichuris or Ascaris alone. Mixed infections made up less than 5% of all infected cases. The worm burdens of infected children were very low. There was no definite pattern of distribution of infection among children of different ages and no differences in the distribution of infection between boys and girls. The main factors for the low prevalence and intensity of infection were the absence of suitable soil for the development and survival of infective helminth stages and the lack of contact with contaminated soil on this island. These two factors acted as very effective barriers to the transmission of soiltransmitted helminths on Pulau Ketam.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.