Risk Factors Related to Scrub Typhus: A Case-control Study
Annie Elizabeth T *
College of Nursing, CMC Vellore, Chittoor Campus, India.
Solomon D’Cruz
Clinical Microbiology, CMC, Vellore, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Aim: To study the risk factors associated with the positivity of scrub typhus among the patients admitted in a secondary care hospital in a rural area in Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh.
Study Design: A case-control study design.
Place and Duration of Study: The study was conducted for the duration of six months among the patients admitted with fever and suspected for Scrub Typhus in a secondary care hospital in a rural area of Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh.
Methodology: The cases were defined as patients who were aged ≥18 years, admitted with fever and tested positive for Scrub Typhus by ELISA (IgM). The controls were defined as patients who were aged ≥18 years, admitted with fever and tested negative for Scrub Typhus by ELISA (IgM). After obtaining informed consent, a self-administered questionnaire was given to the study participants. A total of 98 participants (cases=47; control=51) were recruited using total enumeration sampling technique. For each case recruited, one control was selected after matching for age and gender. The cases and controls were compared for socio-demographic, clinical features, habitual and occupational factors.
Results: People with eschar was more likely to be scrub typhus positive with an odds ratio of 40.39 (95% CI: 5.14 – 317.27) (p value <0.001). Those who had the habit of not bathing daily were identified to be at risk of scrub typhus with an odds ratio 3.18 (1.11 – 9.15) (p value = 0.03). People who indulge in activities like cutting grass, field work and collecting wood were identified to be at risk of contracting the disease with odds ratio 10.51 (1.50 – 73.59) with p value = 0.02.
Conclusion: Poor hygienic practice like not bathing regularly and activities that involves field work, cutting grass and collecting wood poses high risk of contracting scrub typhus.
Keywords: Scrub typhus, occupational factors, farming, cutting grass, collecting wood, Orientia tsutsugamushi, eschar, rickettsial disease, tropical disease