Hookworm Infection and the Risk Factors Among Plantation Workers in Jember, Indonesia
Date
2020-05-01Author
ARMIYANTI, Yunita
UTAMI, Wiwien Sugih
NURDIAN, Yudha
S. Ng, Julie Ann
HERMANSYAH, Bagus
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Hookworm infection is one of the neglected tropical disease (WHO) and 428 200 000 people are infected with
hookworm in wordwilde. Hookworm’s larvae requires soil media in plantation area. Contamination of plantation
soil with hookworm’s larvae can occur through unhygienic defecation habit. Hence, workers in plantation areas
have a high risk of being infected with hookworms. This study was conducted to determine the prevalence
hookworm infection in plantation workers in five plantation areas of Jember, Indonesia District and the risk factors
for hookworm infection. This study was observational analytic study with cross–sectional design. The prevalence
of hookworm infection in plantation workers was determined based on qualitative methods (Sedimentation and
Floatation Method). The defecation habits of the workers were known through questionnaires by interview method.
The characteristics of workers and the risk factors were analyzed by the Chi–square test or Fisher’s exact test. The
results of the study showed that the prevalence of hookworm infection in five plantation areas was 21.30 %. Based
on the results of the questionnaire, most plantation workers (80.5 %) did not defecate in the toilet but at the river or
the plantation area. This risk factor had significant association with the prevalence of hookworm infection
(p<0.05). The results of this study indicated that unhygienic defecation patterns cause hookworm contamination in
the soil of the plantation area. Therefore, the plantation workers could be always expose by the infective larvae as
long as they don’t change their defecation habit.
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