IMMIGRATION AND LEPROSY IN HAWAII, 1960-1981
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 50 (3) , 335-341
Abstract
The 140-yr-old epidemic of leprosy among the people of Hawaii reached its peak at about the beginning of this century and has been subsiding ever since. A preliminary review of new cases of Hawaii in the past 15 yr showed 49 among those born in Hawaii, plus 360 new immigrant cases (largely from the Philippines and Samoa), 130 of whom were of the borderline lepromatous or lepromatous (BL/L) form. Since 1970 all new cases have been treated as ambulatory patients in their home communities. A detailed review of all 95 new Hawaii-born cases in the past 21 yr showed a continuing rapid decline in incidence among ethnic Hawaiian people, with a fall in the proportion of BL/L cases from its former plateau around 40% to only 20% in the last 7 yr. The new immigrant BL/L cases have apparently not caused a significant secondary outbreak among the Hawaiians but have caused a modest increase among Hawaii-born members of their own ethnic groups. Among these recent non-Hawaiian secondary cases, the proportion of BL/L cases has also recently dropped so sharply that the risk of significant tertiary spread is minor. The possible role of improved nutrition in Hawaii as an influence on these recent leprosy patterns is suggested.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- FLUORESCENT LEPROSY ANTIBODY ABSORPTION (FLA-ABS) TEST FOR DETECTING SUB-CLINICAL INFECTION WITH MYCOBACTERIUM-LEPRAE1980
- Acedapsone * in the Prevention of Leprosy: Field Trial in Three High Prevalence Villages in Micronesia †The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1979