Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Rodriguez, Alejandro
Data de Publicação: 2011
Outros Autores: Vaca-Martínez, Gioconda Maritza, Oviedo, Gisela, Erazo, Silvia, Chico, Martha E., Teles, Carlos, Barreto, Mauricio Lima, Rodrigues, Laura C., Cooper, Philip J.
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFBA
Texto Completo: http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/3117
Resumo: Background Studies conducted in transitional communities from Africa and Asia have pointed to the process of urbanisation as being responsible for the increase in asthma prevalence in developing regions. In Latin America, there are few published data available on the potential impact of urbanisation on asthma prevalence. The aim of the present study was to explore how the process of urbanisation may explain differences in asthma prevalence in transitional communities in north-eastern Ecuador. Methodology/principal findings An ecological study was conducted in 59 communities in Esmeraldas Province, Ecuador. Indicators of urbanisation were grouped into three indices representing the processes associated with urbanisation: socioeconomic, lifestyle and urban infrastructure. Categorical principal components analysis was used to generate scores for each index and a fourth indexda summary urbanisation indexdwas derived from the most representative variables in each of the three indices. The authors analysed the associations between community asthma prevalence and the indices, as well as with each indicator variable of every group. The overall prevalence of asthma was 10.1% (range 0e31.4% between communities). Three of the four indices presented significant associations with community asthma prevalence: socioeconomic (r¼0.295,p¼0.023), lifestyle (r¼0.342, p¼0.008) and summary urbanisation index (r¼0.355, p¼0.006). Variables reflecting better socioeconomic status and a more urban lifestyle were associated with greater asthma prevalence. Conclusions These data provide evidence that the prevalence of asthma increases with increasing levels of urbanisation in transitional communities, and factors associated with greater socioeconomic level and changes towards a more urban lifestyle may be particularly important.
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spelling Rodriguez, AlejandroVaca-Martínez, Gioconda MaritzaOviedo, GiselaErazo, SilviaChico, Martha E.Teles, CarlosBarreto, Mauricio LimaRodrigues, Laura C.Cooper, Philip J.Rodriguez, AlejandroVaca-Martínez, Gioconda MaritzaOviedo, GiselaErazo, SilviaChico, Martha E.Teles, CarlosBarreto, Mauricio LimaRodrigues, Laura C.Cooper, Philip J.2011-10-05T14:51:40Z2011-10-05T14:51:40Z20111468-3296http://www.repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/31172011Background Studies conducted in transitional communities from Africa and Asia have pointed to the process of urbanisation as being responsible for the increase in asthma prevalence in developing regions. In Latin America, there are few published data available on the potential impact of urbanisation on asthma prevalence. The aim of the present study was to explore how the process of urbanisation may explain differences in asthma prevalence in transitional communities in north-eastern Ecuador. Methodology/principal findings An ecological study was conducted in 59 communities in Esmeraldas Province, Ecuador. Indicators of urbanisation were grouped into three indices representing the processes associated with urbanisation: socioeconomic, lifestyle and urban infrastructure. Categorical principal components analysis was used to generate scores for each index and a fourth indexda summary urbanisation indexdwas derived from the most representative variables in each of the three indices. The authors analysed the associations between community asthma prevalence and the indices, as well as with each indicator variable of every group. The overall prevalence of asthma was 10.1% (range 0e31.4% between communities). Three of the four indices presented significant associations with community asthma prevalence: socioeconomic (r¼0.295,p¼0.023), lifestyle (r¼0.342, p¼0.008) and summary urbanisation index (r¼0.355, p¼0.006). Variables reflecting better socioeconomic status and a more urban lifestyle were associated with greater asthma prevalence. Conclusions These data provide evidence that the prevalence of asthma increases with increasing levels of urbanisation in transitional communities, and factors associated with greater socioeconomic level and changes towards a more urban lifestyle may be particularly important.Submitted by Maria Creuza Silva (mariakreuza@yahoo.com.br) on 2011-10-05T14:51:37Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Per int 2011.17.pdf: 148001 bytes, checksum: c7eafa2723f63977131156f4dbefacb5 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2011-10-05T14:51:40Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Per int 2011.17.pdf: 148001 bytes, checksum: c7eafa2723f63977131156f4dbefacb5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011AsthmaChildhoodUrbanizationUrbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in EcuadorLondoninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleengreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFBAinstname:Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA)instacron:UFBAinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessORIGINALPer int 2011.17.pdfPer int 2011.17.pdfapplication/pdf148001https://repositorio.ufba.br/bitstream/ri/3117/1/Per%20int%202011.17.pdfc7eafa2723f63977131156f4dbefacb5MD51LICENSElicense.txtlicense.txttext/plain1907https://repositorio.ufba.br/bitstream/ri/3117/2/license.txt0cfd87ff7fd6c6384b84b8c59ecae911MD52TEXTPer int 2011.17.pdf.txtPer int 2011.17.pdf.txtExtracted texttext/plain45566https://repositorio.ufba.br/bitstream/ri/3117/3/Per%20int%202011.17.pdf.txta161a6f74d66755d0cf48b31aa88df02MD53ri/31172022-07-05 14:03:51.902oai:repositorio.ufba.br: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Repositório InstitucionalPUBhttp://192.188.11.11:8080/oai/requestopendoar:19322022-07-05T17:03:51Repositório Institucional da UFBA - Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
dc.title.alternative.pt_BR.fl_str_mv London
title Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
spellingShingle Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
Rodriguez, Alejandro
Asthma
Childhood
Urbanization
title_short Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
title_full Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
title_fullStr Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
title_full_unstemmed Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
title_sort Urbanisation is associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in diverse, small rural communities in Ecuador
author Rodriguez, Alejandro
author_facet Rodriguez, Alejandro
Vaca-Martínez, Gioconda Maritza
Oviedo, Gisela
Erazo, Silvia
Chico, Martha E.
Teles, Carlos
Barreto, Mauricio Lima
Rodrigues, Laura C.
Cooper, Philip J.
author_role author
author2 Vaca-Martínez, Gioconda Maritza
Oviedo, Gisela
Erazo, Silvia
Chico, Martha E.
Teles, Carlos
Barreto, Mauricio Lima
Rodrigues, Laura C.
Cooper, Philip J.
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Rodriguez, Alejandro
Vaca-Martínez, Gioconda Maritza
Oviedo, Gisela
Erazo, Silvia
Chico, Martha E.
Teles, Carlos
Barreto, Mauricio Lima
Rodrigues, Laura C.
Cooper, Philip J.
Rodriguez, Alejandro
Vaca-Martínez, Gioconda Maritza
Oviedo, Gisela
Erazo, Silvia
Chico, Martha E.
Teles, Carlos
Barreto, Mauricio Lima
Rodrigues, Laura C.
Cooper, Philip J.
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Asthma
Childhood
Urbanization
topic Asthma
Childhood
Urbanization
description Background Studies conducted in transitional communities from Africa and Asia have pointed to the process of urbanisation as being responsible for the increase in asthma prevalence in developing regions. In Latin America, there are few published data available on the potential impact of urbanisation on asthma prevalence. The aim of the present study was to explore how the process of urbanisation may explain differences in asthma prevalence in transitional communities in north-eastern Ecuador. Methodology/principal findings An ecological study was conducted in 59 communities in Esmeraldas Province, Ecuador. Indicators of urbanisation were grouped into three indices representing the processes associated with urbanisation: socioeconomic, lifestyle and urban infrastructure. Categorical principal components analysis was used to generate scores for each index and a fourth indexda summary urbanisation indexdwas derived from the most representative variables in each of the three indices. The authors analysed the associations between community asthma prevalence and the indices, as well as with each indicator variable of every group. The overall prevalence of asthma was 10.1% (range 0e31.4% between communities). Three of the four indices presented significant associations with community asthma prevalence: socioeconomic (r¼0.295,p¼0.023), lifestyle (r¼0.342, p¼0.008) and summary urbanisation index (r¼0.355, p¼0.006). Variables reflecting better socioeconomic status and a more urban lifestyle were associated with greater asthma prevalence. Conclusions These data provide evidence that the prevalence of asthma increases with increasing levels of urbanisation in transitional communities, and factors associated with greater socioeconomic level and changes towards a more urban lifestyle may be particularly important.
publishDate 2011
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dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2011-10-05T14:51:40Z
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2011
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