Prevalence of Hookworm Infection in Schoolchildren with Deference Geography Areas in Indonesia
Abstract
The prevalence of hookworm infection is a serious public health concern globally. Java Island and Kalimantan Island have differential environmental
risk factors for hookworm infection, especially rural areas of Indonesia have
high-risk environmental factors for the prevalence of hookworm infection. This
study showed the infection rates and correlation analysis between environmental
risk factors and the prevalence of hookworm infection with statistical analysis.
We performed a cross-sectional study among 226 schoolchildren participants
from rural areas of East Java Province, Central Java Province, and East Kalimantan Province, Indonesia. This study used two diagnostic methods: Kato Katz and
Koga agar plate culture/KAP culture for diagnosing hookworm infections. Pearson chi-square analysis was used to study the correlation between environmental
factors and hookworm infection. This study found the prevalence of hookworms
in East Java Province 69(97.2%), Central Java Province 20(41.7%), and East Kalimantan Province 48(44.9%). Environmental risk factors, such as: rainy season,
quality of soil, and infection hookworm in pets have a significant correlation (pvalue < 0.05) with hookworm infection. The prevalence of hookworm infection
correlates with environmental factors, and the findings in this research could contribute to decreasing programs of hookworm infection especially in rural community areas.
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- J - Public Health [537]