Intestinal parasites in stool testing among refugees at a primary care clinic in Toronto, Canada

Abstract

Abstract

            Background
            Enteric parasites are endemic in many of the countries from which refugees originate. Clinical guidelines vary in approaches to screening for and treating intestinal parasites in refugee receiving countries. This study aims to investigate the prevalence and species of intestinal parasites identified in stool ova and parasite (O&P) specimens in a sample of newly arrived refugees in Toronto, Canada.
          
          
            Methods
            We conducted a retrospective chart review of 1042 refugee patients rostered at a specialized primary care clinic in Toronto from December 2011 to September 2016. Patients who completed recommended stool O&P analyses were included. Basic sociodemographic and clinical variables and results of stool O&P were examined.
          
          
            Results
            419 patients (40.2%) had a stool O&P positive for any protozoan or helminth species. Sixty-nine patients (6.6%) had clinically significant parasite species (excluding B hominis, D fragilis, and E dispar, given their lower risk for causing symptoms/complications): 2.3% had clinically significant protozoans and 4.2% had helminths on stool analysis.
          
          
            Conclusion
            Given the relatively low prevalence of clinically significant parasites identified, our findings do not support universal screening for enteric parasites with stool O&P among refugee claimants/asylum seekers. However, stool analysis should be considered in certain clinical situations, as part of a more tailored approach.

Description

Keywords

Citation

BMC Infectious Diseases. 2022 Mar 13;22(1):249

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-022-07226-4

ISSN

Creative Commons

Creative Commons URI

Items in TSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.