Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care (Jan 2019)

Pattern and determinants of soil-transmitted helminthiasis in a rural area of Haryana: A school-based study

  • Rohit Dhaka,
  • Ramesh Verma,
  • Raj Kumar,
  • Vinod Chayal,
  • Kapil Bhalla,
  • Ranvir Singh,
  • Ginni Agrawal,
  • Gopal Kumar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_278_19
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
pp. 1971 – 1975

Abstract

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Background: In the world, helminthiasis is the major public health problem in school-age children. More than 60 million school-age children live in intensively transmitted areas and they need immediate treatment and preventive interventions. Methodology: The study was conducted in the rural government schools of Block Beri, District Jhajjar (Haryana), India, and the study was descriptive and cross-sectional in design. The study recruited 300 school-going children in the age group of 6–10 years. Results: In this study, the mean age of subjects was 7.68 ± 1.467 years and prevalence of soil-transmitted helminths was 28.7%. The association between practice of hand washing and practice of washing fruits and vegetables with helminthic children were found statistically significant. Conclusion and Recommendation: Impart health education among community through primary care physician about wash hands before eating food and after defecation, washed thoroughly raw and uncooked food before eating.

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