14. Patterns of zoonotic diseases and associated socio-economic factors in tanzania: A scoping review

Yuster Lucas Masanja, Hoang Thi Hai Van

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Zoonotic diseases (ZDs) are important contributors of infectious disease burden especially in developing nations. In Tanzania, several factors have been associated with the distribution of ZDs among different populations. This review aimed at describing such a pattern together with their associated socio-economic factors. The search for relevant articles was carried in PubMed/MedLine with additional hand searched articles through Google and Google-Scholar. We identified a total of 1,087 relevant articles, 27 of which met our inclusion criteria. Our findings showed that the prevalence of Brucellosis, Leptospirosis, Q Fever, Rift Valley Fever, Cysticercosis, Echinococcosis, Schistosomiasis, Toxoplasmosis, Fascioliasis and Cryptosporidiosis were 0.6 - 48.4%, 10 - 33.9%, 5 - 20.3%, 4.5 - 5.2%, 2.7 - 16.7%, 11.3%, 15.8 - 63.91%, 57.7%, 21% and 4.3% respectively, depending on geographical locations. On other hand, levels of education, occupation, residence and ethnicity were associated with increased risks of ZDs in Tanzania. This review reinforces the need for more resilient surveillance and monitoring systems that can offer quality data for evidence-based policing. Likewise, it underscores the neglected burdens of most ZDs in Tanzania.

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Tài liệu tham khảo

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