Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2009)

Imported Infectious Diseases in Mobile Populations, Spain

  • Begoña Monge-Maillo,
  • B. Carolina Jiménez,
  • José A. Pérez-Molina,
  • Francesca F. Norman,
  • Miriam Navarro,
  • Ana Pérez-Ayala,
  • Juan M. Herrero,
  • Pilar Zamarrón,
  • Rogelio López-Vélez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1511.090718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
pp. 1745 – 1752

Abstract

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Migration has contributed to the emergence of certain infectious diseases. To determine which infectious diseases were most common among 2 mobile immigrant groups (sub-Saharan Africans and Latin Americans) in Spain, we analyzed health and demographic characteristics of 2,198 immigrants referred to the Tropical Medicine Unit of Ramón y Cajal Hospital over a 20-year period. The most frequent diagnoses were for latent tuberculosis (716 patients [32.6%]), filariasis (421 [19.2%]), hepatropic virus chronic infection (262 [19.2%]), intestinal parasites (242 [11.0%]), and malaria (212 [9.6%]). Health screening of immigrant populations is needed to ensure early diagnosis and treatment of potentially transmissible infections.

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