Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis

Abstract Objective The study aims to assess the burden of intestinal parasites and Salmonellosis among asymptomatic food handlers at meal serving facilities in Sodo town. Antibiotic resistance was also common and increasing among Salmonella isolates with multidrug resistance as current concern. Resu...

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Main Authors: Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon, Fiseha Wadilo Wada, Antehun Alemayehu Anjulo, Hailu Chare Koyra, Efrata Girma Tufa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Research Notes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3610-4
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spelling doaj-f7a95aaefd17449aaea082429f9123d02020-11-25T01:07:37ZengBMCBMC Research Notes1756-05002018-07-011111610.1186/s13104-018-3610-4Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosisFithamlak Bisetegen Solomon0Fiseha Wadilo Wada1Antehun Alemayehu Anjulo2Hailu Chare Koyra3Efrata Girma Tufa4Department of Medical Laboratory, School of Medicine, Wolaita Sodo UniversityDepartment of Medical Laboratory, School of Medicine, Wolaita Sodo UniversityDepartment of Medical Laboratory, School of Medicine, Wolaita Sodo UniversityDepartment of Pharmacy, Wolaita Sodo UniversitySchool of Public Health, Wolaita Sodo UniversityAbstract Objective The study aims to assess the burden of intestinal parasites and Salmonellosis among asymptomatic food handlers at meal serving facilities in Sodo town. Antibiotic resistance was also common and increasing among Salmonella isolates with multidrug resistance as current concern. Result Community based cross-sectional study was carried out from 387 food handlers working in meal serving facilities. Food handlers, 159(41%) had one or more intestinal parasites. A. lumbricoides was the most prevalent parasite 30(7.8%), followed by Taenia species 26(6.7%) and Hook worm 23(5.9%). A total number of 35 Salmonella isolates were found of which Sero-group D was the most frequent, 17(48.5%) followed by Sero-group C, 12(34.3%), and B 6(17.1%). Ten (2.5%) isolates were Salmonella typhi. Raw meat eating, hand washing after toilet and after touching dirty materials showed significant association with intestinal pathogens. Salmonella isolates were highly resistant to ampicillin (85.7%), amoxicillin and tetracycline 74.3% each. Multidrug resistance prevalence of 81.8% was identified. Periodic screening of food handlers is important in order to prevent the transmission of intestinal parasites and Salmonellosis. Treatment needs to be based on accurate laboratory detection to mitigate the spread of drug resistant Salmonella strains.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3610-4Intestinal parasitesSalmonellaSero-groupS. typhiAntibioticMulti-drug resistance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon
Fiseha Wadilo Wada
Antehun Alemayehu Anjulo
Hailu Chare Koyra
Efrata Girma Tufa
spellingShingle Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon
Fiseha Wadilo Wada
Antehun Alemayehu Anjulo
Hailu Chare Koyra
Efrata Girma Tufa
Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
BMC Research Notes
Intestinal parasites
Salmonella
Sero-group
S. typhi
Antibiotic
Multi-drug resistance
author_facet Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon
Fiseha Wadilo Wada
Antehun Alemayehu Anjulo
Hailu Chare Koyra
Efrata Girma Tufa
author_sort Fithamlak Bisetegen Solomon
title Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
title_short Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
title_full Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
title_fullStr Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
title_full_unstemmed Burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in South Ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
title_sort burden of intestinal pathogens and associated factors among asymptomatic food handlers in south ethiopia: emphasis on salmonellosis
publisher BMC
series BMC Research Notes
issn 1756-0500
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Objective The study aims to assess the burden of intestinal parasites and Salmonellosis among asymptomatic food handlers at meal serving facilities in Sodo town. Antibiotic resistance was also common and increasing among Salmonella isolates with multidrug resistance as current concern. Result Community based cross-sectional study was carried out from 387 food handlers working in meal serving facilities. Food handlers, 159(41%) had one or more intestinal parasites. A. lumbricoides was the most prevalent parasite 30(7.8%), followed by Taenia species 26(6.7%) and Hook worm 23(5.9%). A total number of 35 Salmonella isolates were found of which Sero-group D was the most frequent, 17(48.5%) followed by Sero-group C, 12(34.3%), and B 6(17.1%). Ten (2.5%) isolates were Salmonella typhi. Raw meat eating, hand washing after toilet and after touching dirty materials showed significant association with intestinal pathogens. Salmonella isolates were highly resistant to ampicillin (85.7%), amoxicillin and tetracycline 74.3% each. Multidrug resistance prevalence of 81.8% was identified. Periodic screening of food handlers is important in order to prevent the transmission of intestinal parasites and Salmonellosis. Treatment needs to be based on accurate laboratory detection to mitigate the spread of drug resistant Salmonella strains.
topic Intestinal parasites
Salmonella
Sero-group
S. typhi
Antibiotic
Multi-drug resistance
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13104-018-3610-4
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