P-506. Spatial Clustering of Congenital Syphilis-Related Stillbirths in Nuevo Leon, Mexico: Identifying Spatial Gaps in Care
Lindsay Ariadna Concha-Mora, Abril M Gutiérrez-Castro, Paola Quintanilla-Urdiales, Rocio Ximena Sandoval-Orozco, Rubén G Valadez-Mata, Judith Estela Guzman Garcia, Ian Carlo Pineda-Fierro, Jessica Guerra-Díaz, Oscar Tamez-Rivera

TL;DR
This study maps congenital syphilis-related stillbirths in Nuevo Leon, Mexico, revealing geographic clusters linked to areas of high social marginalization.
Contribution
The paper introduces a geospatial analysis linking congenital syphilis and stillbirth cases to social marginalization and access to care.
Findings
Stillbirths and congenital syphilis cases clustered in three urban municipalities with high marginalization.
Most affected mothers lived within 2 km of an outpatient clinic but far from the reference hospital.
Geospatial patterns suggest social and geographic inequities contribute to poor syphilis outcomes.
Abstract
Stillbirths due to congenital syphilis are among the most devastating yet preventable outcomes of maternal infection. Vertical transmission remains widespread globally, especially in low-middle-income countries. In Mexico, rising maternal syphilis rates have been accompanied by an increase in CS-related stillbirths, yet the factors driving these outcomes remain unclear. Geographic context—distance to care and local environmental or social conditions—may influence clinical trajectories. Geospatial analysis identifies patterns of vulnerability and informs targeted interventions.Image 1.Gepgraphic and distance analysis of stillborn infants cases with syphilis infection from 2015 to 2022.A. Geographic distribution map of stillborn infants with syphilis from 2015 to 2022.B. Heat map of stillborn infants with syphilis from 2015 to 2022.C. Distance to the nearest OPC from the address of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSyphilis Diagnosis and Treatment · Maternal and Neonatal Healthcare · Literature Analysis and Criticism
