posted on 2022-10-26, 19:03authored byDrew Capone, Troy Barker, Oliver Cumming, Abeoseh Flemister, Riley Geason, Elizabeth Kim, Jackie Knee, Yarrow Linden, Musa Manga, Mackenzie Meldrum, Rassul Nala, Simrill Smith, Joe Brown
In low-income, urban,
informal communities lacking sewerage
and
solid waste services, onsite sanitation (sludges, aqueous effluent)
and child feces are potential sources of human fecal contamination
in living environments. Working in informal communities of urban Maputo,
Mozambique, we developed a quantitative, stochastic, mass-balance
approach to evaluate plausible scenarios of localized contamination
that could explain why the soil-transmitted helminth Ascaris remains endemic despite nearly universal coverage of latrines that
sequester most fecal wastes. We used microscopy to enumerate presumptively
viable Ascaris ova in feces, fecal sludges, and soils
from compounds (i.e., household clusters) and then constructed a steady-state
mass-balance model to evaluate possible contamination scenarios capable
of explaining observed ova counts in soils. Observed Ascaris counts (mean = −0.01 log10 ova per wet gram of
soil, sd = 0.71 log10) could be explained by deposits of
1.9 grams per day (10th percentile 0.04 grams, 90th percentile 84
grams) of child feces on average, rare fecal sludge contamination
events that transport 17 kg every three years (10th percentile 1.0
kg, 90th percentile 260 kg), or a daily discharge of 2.7 kg aqueous
effluent from an onsite system (10th percentile 0.09 kg, 90th percentile
82 kg). Results suggest that even limited intermittent flows of fecal
wastes in this setting can result in a steady-state density of Ascaris ova in soils capable of sustaining transmission,
given the high prevalence of Ascaris shedding by
children (prevalence = 25%; mean = 3.7 log10 per wet gram,
sd = 1.1 log10), the high Ascaris ova
counts in fecal sludges (prevalence = 88%; mean = 1.8 log10 per wet gram, sd = 0.95 log10), and the extended persistence
and viability of Ascaris ova in soils. Even near-universal
coverage of onsite sanitation may allow for sustained transmission
of Ascaris under these conditions.