Sub-Saharan Africa is urbanizing at a rate of 3-5% with>70% of new urban residents settling in informal settlements, which are urban slums with high population density and limited sanitation, hygiene and water quality. Likewise, municipalities in south and southeast Asia are dominated by similar informal settlements. As a result, water-borne and food-borne diseases are frequently seen. Typhoid fever, a rare entity inwealthy nations, is highly endemic in urban slums in Kenya, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Indonesia. Adjusted incidence rates arehighest in children2-to-10years of age and have been documented to be as high as 2 per 100 person-years in Nairobi, Kenya, and are likely as high or higher in many other settings with similar conditions. Among available interventions to reduce the immense burden of typhoid fever, typhoid vaccines appear to be most likely to have the greatest effect at least for the forseeable future. Existing Vi capsular polysaccharide vaccine induces T-cell independent antibody responses; thus, repeat vaccination would not produce a booster effect and the vaccine would not be useful in children 2 years old and adults could be considered in highly endemic areas, the vaccine could not be incorporated into existing routine infant immunization programs; in addition, efficacy in south Asian slum settings has been variable and relatively low (61% in Kolkata and<50% in Karachi). New protein conjugate vaccines hold promise, as do new oral live-attenuated typhoid vaccines which will be available in liquid format and appear to be immunogenic with a single dose. Hand hygiene, availability of toilets and sewage management, as well as water treatment would likely have substantial additional impact. Endemic typhoid is a marker for insufficient infrastructure and for inequities in formal government services. Ultimate solutions rest with raising minimum standards of living in urban environments and may require innovation, investment, and commitment from business and technology sectors, local and national governments, academia, and society.
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