Prevalence of enteric pathogens in mothers and children from communities in the La Paz River Basin Bolivia; associations with water, sanitation, and hygiene conditions
Journal article, 2026

Enteric infections remain a major public health challenge in low- and middle-income countries, disproportionately affecting young children. We conducted a cross-sectional study to characterize the prevalence of enteropathogens among mothers and children from peri-urban and rural communities in the La Paz River Basin Bolivia, and to examine associations with water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) conditions. Fecal samples were analyzed by real-time PCR to detect 21 viral, bacterial, and parasitic pathogens, alongside household surveys and water quality assessments. Sixteen pathogens were detected, 85% of participants carried at least one pathogen, with frequent coinfections. The most prevalent pathogens were Helicobacter pylori, adenovirus, EPEC, Giardia lamblia, and Shigella. Pathogen carriage was higher in rural than in peri-urban settings, with bacterial infections predominating in the lower basin and viral infections in the upper basin. Children carried more viral and parasitic pathogens, while mothers had more bacterial pathogens. Significant mother-child concordance was observed for several pathogens, supporting shared household exposures. Enteric pathogen carriage was strongly associated with drinking water source, sanitation practices, housing quality, and hygiene behaviors, particularly reliance on cistern/spring water, open defecation, and inadequate hand hygiene. These findings highlight a substantial and heterogeneous burden of enteric infections, underscoring the need for integrated WASH interventions.HIGHLIGHTSHigh burden of enteric pathogens in La Paz River Basin households. Rural households showed higher bacterial, viral & parasitic carriage than peri-urban settings. Children more often carried viral and parasitic infections; mothers, bacterial. Unsafe cistern water linked to Shigella, diarrheagenic E. coli, & Giardia while open field defection to ETEC. Findings highlight the need for integrated WASH interventions.

mothers-children

enteric pathogen carriage

hygiene practices

rural settings WASH

Author

Cinthia Copeticona-Callejas

Higher University of San Andrés

Sonia Jimenez

Higher University of San Andrés

Alejandra Torrez-Mamani

Higher University of San Andrés

Belen Choque-Pardo

Higher University of San Andrés

Jorge Agramont

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Josue Mamani-Jarro

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Lucia Inchauste

University of Corsica

Stephane Priet

University of Corsica

Adriana Soto

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Carla Liera

Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI)

Volga Iniguez

Higher University of San Andrés

Journal of Water and Health

1477-8920 (ISSN) 19967829 (eISSN)

Vol. 24 2 239-263

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine

Infectious Medicine

Microbiology in the Medical Area

DOI

10.2166/wh.2026.243

PubMed

41764394

More information

Latest update

3/17/2026