Poorer households with too many milling around are potential breeding grounds of acute rheumatic fever (ARF), warn New Zealand researchers.
Poorer households with too many milling around are potential breeding grounds of acute rheumatic fever (ARF), warn New Zealand researchers. The country has one of the highest reported rates of acute rheumatic fever amongst children and teenagers in the developed world; an infectious disease which can cause chronic rheumatic heart disease through damaged heart valves, and results in over 120 deaths a year. Predictably the problem seems particularly acute with the Maori and Pacific families, tribal sections way down the economic ladder.
In the last few years, Maori rates of ARF were 20 times, and Pacific rates 40 times, that of New Zealand European and others, a study at the University of Otago, Wellington reveals.
Lead researcher Dr Richard Jaine, and Associate Professor Michael Baker, looked at 1249 cases of acute rheumatic fever, hospitalized between 1996 and 2005, and related them to census data and household crowding.
“We found a clear and positive association between household crowding as a risk factor for ARF incidence,” Dr Jaine says, “and this effect persisted after controlling for age, ethnicity, household income and density of children in the neighbourhood.”
Notwithstanding the very large ethnic disparities, Dr Jaine says that perhaps the most telling result from this study is that the ARF rate for areas with the most crowded households are close to 90 per cent higher than for areas with the least crowded households, even taking into account age, ethnicity and household income. Crowded households are households where there are not enough bedrooms to sufficiently cater for the occupants of the house.
“It’s of serious concern that in other developed countries acute rheumatic fever is often not even recorded in health statistics because it’s almost non-existent, yet in New Zealand rates have remained persistently high over the last 10 to 20 years in Maori and Pacific families, and continue to rise,” says Dr Jaine.
Advertisement
“This research is further evidence of the need for much more effective public health interventions in high risk areas regarding sore thoats and ARF. Infection with Group A Streptococcus bacteria, or ‘strep’ throat, is a very serious matter as it is the cause of rheumatic fever in children.”
Advertisement
These latest research results on ARF also indicate the importance of appropriate social housing at affordable rents for low income families, avoiding high risk families ‘doubling-up’ in overcrowded homes.
The researchers say Maori and Pacific families may be at added risk of being infected as ARF is now much more common in these groups, and in the North Island. This makes it more likely that exponential growth of this bacteria-induced disease will occur through multiple infection, increasing the risk of potentially fatal heart valve damage.
This research was published recently in The Pediatric Infectious Diseases Journal, and has been carried out within the He Kainga Oranga/Housing and Health Research Programme, supported by the Health Research Council of New Zealand.
Source-Medindia