BEIJING, June 25 (Xinhuanet) -- America's poor
are besieged by worms and parasites that are draining their health and
energy, an expert said Tuesday.
And "diseases of neglect"
associated with the developing world, such as dengue fever and Chagas disease,
may become a bigger problem for the United States as the climate changes, said Dr.
Peter Hotez of George Washington University and the Sabin Vaccine Institute in
Washington.
"The message is a little tough because they are not
killer diseases ¡ª they impact on child development, intellectual development,
hearing and sometimes even heart disease," Hotez said in a telephone interview.
He said the diseases help to keep people mired in
poverty, as infections may last years, decades or even lifetimes.
"Throughout the American South during the early
twentieth century, malaria combined with hookworm infection and pellagra (a
vitamin deficiency) to produce a generation of anemic, weak, and unproductive
children and adults," Hotez wrote.
Hotez reviewed nine diseases affecting at least 10
million Americans for a report in the journal Public Library of Science
Neglected Tropical Diseases, which he also edits.
"These diseases occur predominantly in people of
color living in the Mississippi Delta and elsewhere in the American South, in
disadvantaged urban areas, and in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, as well as in
certain immigrant populations and disadvantaged white populations living in
Appalachia," he wrote.
Better sanitation, piped clean water, improvements in
housing as well as better testing and medical treatment could help curb these
"diseases of neglect," says the report.
(Agencies)