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Typhoid in India: An Age-old Problem With an Existing Solution
Author(s) -
Supriya Kumar,
Raj Shankar Ghosh,
Harish Iyer,
Arindam Ray,
Kirsten Vannice,
Calman A. MacLennan,
Tanya Shewchuk,
A. Duncan Steele
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1093/infdis/jiab441
Subject(s) - typhoid fever , sanitation , pandemic , public health , environmental health , medicine , enteric fever , disease burden , paratyphoid fever , disease , covid-19 , virology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , population , nursing , pathology
Enteric fever continues to impact millions of people who lack adequate access to clean water and sanitation. The typhoid and paratyphoid fever burden in South Asia is broadly acknowledged, but current estimates of incidence, severity, and cost of illness from India are lacking. This supplement addresses this gap in our knowledge, presenting findings from two years of surveillance, conducted at multiple sites between October 2017 and February 2020, in the Surveillance for Enteric Fever in India (SEFI) network. Results provide contemporaneous evidence of high disease burden and cost of illness—the latter borne largely by patients in the absence of universal healthcare coverage in India. Against a backdrop of immediate priorities in the COVID-19 pandemic, these data are a reminder that typhoid, though often forgotten, remains a public health problem in India. Typhoid conjugate vaccines, produced by multiple Indian manufacturers, and recommended for use in high burden settings, ensure that the tools to tackle typhoid are an immediately available solution to this public health problem.

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