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Skin problems among farmers engaged in Peri-urban Aquatic Production Systems in Hanoi and Phnom Penh Hanoi: Vuong Tuan Anh1, Wim van der Hoek4, Nguyen Dang Tuan1, Nguyen Van Thuong5, Phung Dac Cam1, Anders Dalsgaard2 PhnomPenh: Vuong Tuan Anh1, Wim van der Hoek4, Chan Vichet6, Phung Dac Cam1, Anders Dalsgaard2 1Division of Enteric Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Vietnam; 2Department of Pathobiology, Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Denmark; 3Faculty of Fisheries Royal University of Agriculture, Cambodia; 4International Water Management Institute, Sri Lanka; 5National Institute of Dermatology, Vietnam; 6National Clinic for Dermatology & STD Unit, Cambodia Objectives • • Estimate the prevalence of skin problems among people involved in agricultural and aqua-cultural work Determine whether wastewater exposure is associated with skin problems Formulate recommendations for preventing/reducing skin diseases and discuss these with stakeholders Methodology I: Hanoi and Phnom Penh • Survey in ww (100 households (HHs)) and non ww sites (100 HHs) • Cross-sectional study: – Hanoi: May, Sept, and Dec 2005 – Phnom Penh: July 04, Jan 05, and March 05 • Household questionnaire interviews: – Hanoi: adult farmers – Phnom Penh: all members > 15 yrs • Information collected on current skin problems and skin problems experienced during the previous 3 months • Clinical manifestations and patient information collected by dermatologist • Free treatment provided Methodology II • Local assistants were trained for data collection • Studies supervised and quality assured by NIHE/KVL • Data entry and analysis: Access database and SPSS 11.5 Results: Phnom Penh • Data from each of the three cross-sectional studies were entered into individual database files • However, problems are experienced with merging these databases into one common database. Thus, data is not shown Results: Hanoi Study population: more women involved in farm work than men Sites Hoang Liet (ww) Long Bien (non-ww) Sex Survey 1 (May ’05) Survey 2 (Sept ’05) Survey 3 (Dec ’05) Male Female 23 96 29 98 29 101 Male Female 29 94 35 95 35 94 Results: Hanoi Percentage of respondents reporting skin problem in last 3 months 30,0 26,0 25,0 20,2 16,2 20,0 % 15,0 10,0 3,3 3,8 2,3 5,0 0,0 Survey 1 Survey 2 ww site Survey 3 Survey 1 Survey number Survey 2 Survey 3 non-ww site Results: Hanoi Perentage of respondents reporting dermatitis in last 3 months ww site 14,0 12,0 11,8 11,0 10,0 8,0 % 6,9 non-ww site 6,0 4,0 2,0 0,8 0,0 Survey 1 Survey 2 Survey 3 Survey 3 Results: Hanoi Location of skin problems ww Mainly nails! Non-ww 70,0 60,0 % 50,0 Foot Leg Hand Fore-arm 40,0 30,0 20,0 10,0 0,0 Survey Survey Survey Survey Survey Survey 1 2 3 1 2 3 Results: Hanoi Prevalence of skin problems registered at the time of interview Sites Hoang Liet (ww) Long Bien (non-ww) Survey 1 Survey 2 Survey 3 (May ’05) (Sept ’05) (Dec ’05) 42 (35%) 27 (21%) 19 (14%) 6 (5%) 7 (5%) 3 (2%) Results: Hoang Liet commune (ww) Number of working hours in contact with ww 80.0 70.0 60.0 <4 % 50.0 4 to 8 40.0 8 to 10 30.0 > 10 20.0 10.0 0.0 1 2 survey number 3 Results: diagnosis of current skin problems made by the dermatologist Most common diagnosis was contact dermatitis Other diagnoses: •Atopic dermatitis •Urticaria •Fungus infection •Bacterial infection Conclusions High prevalence of self-reported skin problems among farmers exposed to wastewater Contact dermatitis is the most common skin condition but case numbers are small Better assessment of exposure (specific biologic and physical-chemical factors) is needed Future works • Phnom Penh database to be repaired and data cleaned • Data analysis: – Descriptive analyses – Multiple logistic regression • Manuscript submissions (2 x MS to be submitted to international peer-reviewed journals) Acknowledgments • We are grateful for the help and assistance offered by members of the field Team at the Royal University of Agriculture in Phnom Penh, local people in Hoang Liet and Long Bien communes for data collection • Colleagues in the National Inst. of Hygiene and Epidemiology (NIHE) for data entries • EU-INCO-DEV (PAPUSSA) and the Danish International Development Assistance (Danida) for financial support