Demographic distribution and transmission potential of influenza A and 2009 pandemic influenza A H1N1 in pilgrims

Autores: Ashshi Ahmad Mohammad, Azhar Esam, Johargy Ayman, Asghar Atif, Momenah Aiman, Turkestani Abdulhafeez, Alghamdi Saad, et al

Resumen

Introduction: The World Health Organization’s persistent reporting of global outbreaks of influenza A viruses, including the 2009 pandemic swine A H1N1 strain (H1N1pdm09), justified the targeted surveillance of pilgrims during their annual congregation that pools more than two million people from around 165 nations in a confined area of Makkah city in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). Methodology: A total of 1,600 pilgrims were included in the targeted surveillance of influenza A and the 2009 pandemic swine H1N1 strain in the Hajj (pilgrimage) season of 2010. Each pilgrim responded to a demographic and health questionnaire. Collected oropharyngeal swabs were analyzed by real-time PCR for influenza A viruses, and positive samples were further analyzed for the presence of H1N1pdm09. Fisher’s exact test was applied in the analysis of the significance of the distribution of influenza-positive pilgrims according to demographic characters. Results: A total of 120 pilgrims (7.5%) tested positive for influenza A viruses by real-time PCR. Nine out of the 120 influenza-A-positive pilgrims (7.5%) were positive for H1N1pdm09. Demographics played a significant role in those pilgrims who tested positive for influenza A. Conclusions: The detection of H1N1pdm09 in pilgrims at their port of entry to the KSA was alarming, due to the high potential of trans-boundary transmission. This situation necessitates the implementation of specific prevention and control programs to limit infection by influenza A viruses.

Palabras clave: Demographic distribution; Makkah pilgrims; influenza A H1N1.

2014-09-23   |   327 visitas   |   Evalua este artículo 0 valoraciones

Vol. 8 Núm.9. Septiembre 2014 Pags. 1169-1175 J Infect Developing Countries 2014; 8(9)