PMID: 16645580Apr 29, 2006Paper

Risk factors for brucellosis--Leylek and Kadamjay districts, Batken Oblast, Kyrgyzstan, January-November, 2003

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Turatbek B KozukeevCenters for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Abstract

Brucellosis is a zoonotic disease that is associated with chronic serious sequelae in humans. During 1997-2002, the reported incidence of human brucellosis in Kyrgyzstan increased nearly twofold, from 20 to 36 per 100,000 population. In 2002, the highest incidence of brucellosis was reported in two rural districts of Batkan Oblast: Leylek (106 per 100,000 population) and Kadamjay (80 per 100,000 population). During January-November 2003, trainees from the Applied Epidemiology Training program in Central Asia conducted a matched, hospital-based, case-control study to identify risk factors for brucellosis and describe the epidemiology of disease in these two districts. Brucellosis cases were defined on the basis of epidemiologic, clinical, and laboratory criteria. During January-November 2003, a total of 100 persons with confirmed brucellosis were identified in the infectious disease wards of the two district hospitals; these persons were matched by age and date of admission to 100 controls who were admitted to other hospital wards for unrelated conditions. Data on socioeconomic and occupational factors and history of exposure to animals and animal products were collected by using a structured questionnaire. Conditional logistic ...Continue Reading

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