P-505. Geospatial Patterns of Maternal Syphilis in Northern Mexico: An 8-Year Data Analysis
Paola Quintanilla-Urdiales, Abril M Gutiérrez-Castro, Rubén G Valadez-Mata, Ian Carlo Pineda-Fierro, Judith Estela Guzman Garcia, Jessica Guerra-Díaz, Rocio Ximena Sandoval-Orozco, Oscar Tamez-Rivera, Lindsay Ariadna Concha-Mora

TL;DR
This study maps the geographic spread of maternal syphilis in northern Mexico to identify areas needing better access to diagnostic and treatment services.
Contribution
The study reveals increasing spatial clustering of maternal syphilis cases and highlights gaps in healthcare access.
Findings
Most pregnant women with syphilis lived over 10 km from the reference hospital but within 2 km of an outpatient clinic.
A significant clustering of cases was observed in 2021, indicating a growing geographic concentration of the disease.
Geospatial analysis identified hotspots where syphilis is prevalent but healthcare access is limited.
Abstract
Syphilis remains a major public health issue. In 2024, the WHO estimated that 8 million adults acquired syphilis worldwide, and >700,000 cases of congenital syphilis were reported. In Mexico, maternal syphilis rose by 222% between 2016 - 2022, highlighting the need for enhanced surveillance strategies. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) offer valuable information for public health interventions. Previous studies have consistently demonstrated that distances >10 km from a facility with diagnostic and therapeutic capacity negatively impact patient outcomes.Image 1.Distribution and distance analysis of VDRL-positive pregnant women diagnosed at the Maternal and Child Health Hospital (HRMI) from 2015 – 2022.1A. Geographic distribution of VDRL-pregnant women diagnosed at the HRMI in 2015. 1B. Distance in km between case-to-HRMI of 2015. 1C. Distance in km between case-to-nearest OPCs of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSyphilis Diagnosis and Treatment · Data-Driven Disease Surveillance · Maternal and Neonatal Healthcare
