Acceso abierto·Documento·2022·Inglés

Waterborne diseases and ethnic-related disparities: A 10 years nationwide mortality and burden of disease analysis from Ecuador

Esteban Ortiz‐Prado; Katherine Simbaña‐Rivera; Gabriel Cevallos; Lenin Gómez‐Barreno; Domenica Cevallos; Alex Lister; Raúl Fernández-Naranjo; Blanca Ríos‐Touma; Jorge Vásconez-González; Juan S. Izquierdo‐Condoy

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Resumen

In Ecuador, waterborne diseases (WBD) are still a major public health problem. We found that indigenous population had higher probability of getting sick and die due to WBD than the rest of the ethnic groups in Ecuador. We also found that younger children and the elderly are more likely to be admitted to the hospital due to a WBD. These epidemiological trends are probably associated with the lower life expectancy found among Indigenous than among the rest of the ethnic groups, who die at least, 39 years earlier than the self-determined white populations, 28 years earlier than Afro-Ecuadorians and 12 years earlier than the mestizos.

Cómo citar

Esteban Ortiz‐Prado, & Katherine Simbaña‐Rivera, & Gabriel Cevallos, & Lenin Gómez‐Barreno, & Domenica Cevallos, & Alex Lister, & Raúl Fernández-Naranjo, & Blanca Ríos‐Touma, & Jorge Vásconez-González, & Juan S. Izquierdo‐Condoy (2022). Waterborne diseases and ethnic-related disparities: A 10 years nationwide mortality and burden of disease analysis from Ecuador. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.1029375