Diagnostic performance of screening methods for urinary schistosomiasis in a school-based control programme, in Ibadan, Nigeria

Authors

  • AA Fatiregun
  • KO Osungbade
  • EA Olumide

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/jcmphc.v17i1.32421

Keywords:

urinary schistosomiasis, diagnostic performance, screening methods

Abstract

sed for screening high-risk populations in endemic areas. Their diagnostic performances, however, vary. The objective of this study was to assess their usefulness in the context of a school-based control programme technique (unqualified haematuria, terminal haematuria and dysuria), visual examination of urine and chemical reagent technique were each compared with microscopic examination of urine for schistosome ova.
Results: Chemical reagent strip technique was the most sensitive of all indirect methods assessed with sensitivity of 68.3%, followed by unqualified haematuria (41.7%), terminal haematuria (38.2%), dysuria (25.0%) and visual urine examination (16.7%). In terms of specificity, terminal haematuria and visual examination were the most specific with values of 96.1 and 96.0% respectively.
Conclusion: The validity of screening methods agreed with previous observations. Their use, however, depends on the endemicity of schistosomiasis in a given area. There is therefore a need to evaluate screening methods on a sample of the target population before being used to estimate prevalence of disease.

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Published

2005-06-01

How to Cite

AA Fatiregun, KO Osungbade, & EA Olumide. (2005). Diagnostic performance of screening methods for urinary schistosomiasis in a school-based control programme, in Ibadan, Nigeria. Journal of Community Medicine & Primary Health Care, 17(1), 24–27. https://doi.org/10.4314/jcmphc.v17i1.32421

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Articles