Hookworm and Poverty

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Hookworm and Poverty"

Transcription

1 Hookworm and Poverty PETER HOTEZ Sabin Vaccine Institute, Washington, DC, USA Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Tropical Medicine, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA Human hookworm infection is the leading cause of anemia and undernutrition and the second most important parasitic infection of humans. Hookworm occurs almost exclusively in the setting of rural poverty in the developing countries of the tropics. The rural dependency reflects the precise soil and temperature requirements of the environmental life history stages of the parasite, whereas the relationship between hookworm and poverty is based on multiple factors, including inadequate sanitation, the absence of concrete floors in home dwellings, and lack of access to essential medicines. Also, hookworm not only occurs in the setting of poverty but also promotes poverty because of its health and educational effects in children, its adverse effect on pregnancy outcome, and its effect on worker productivity. Since the middle of the 20th century, poverty reduction and urbanization have successfully reduced the prevalence of hookworm in the world s industrialized nations and some middle-income countries. However, the control of hookworm in low-income countries still relies heavily on the frequent and periodic use of anthelminthic drugs either through deworming programs targeting school-aged children or through integrated control programs that simultaneously target the seven neglected tropical diseases, including hookworm. However, the high rates of hookworm reinfection and the possible emergence of drug resistance will ultimately require the development of new control tools including the Human Hookworm Vaccine, one of several so-called antipoverty vaccines that could undergo development and testing over the next decade. Key words: hookworm; poverty; vaccine Human hookworm infection is one of the most common diseases of poor people and a leading cause of anemia and undernutrition in developing countries. 1,2 An estimated 576 million people are infected worldwide, 3 with the most infections occurring in sub- Saharan Africa followed by Southeast Asia, India, and the Americas (TABLE 1). For disability, and using the disability-adjusted life year as a metric, hookworm infection is the second most important parasitic infection of humans, behind malaria. 2,4 Hookworm is one of several so-called neglected tropical diseases, a group of 13 major poverty-promoting chronic and disabling tropical infections. 5 There are multiple species of hookworm, but almost all cases of human hookworm infection are caused by the nematode parasites Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale, with the former predominating in Address for correspondence: Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, Ross Hall 736, 2300 I St., NW, Washington DC, Voice: ; fax: photez@gwu.edu, peter.hotez@sabin.org Scientific Approaches to Understanding and Reducing Poverty Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences most of the world. 1 In the developing regions of the tropics, almost all hookworm cases occur in areas of extreme rural poverty. The roughly 600 million cases of hookworm are distributed predominantly in agricultural areas and among the estimated 2.7 billion people who live on less than $2 per day. 5 Therefore, environment and socioeconomic status represent the two most important determinants for acquiring hookworm. Effect of the Rural Environment on Hookworm The key environmental components for ensuring hookworm transmission and endemicity are temperature, and soil moisture, and soil type. 6 Such conditions are met predominantly in rural areas of the tropics and in coastal areas in particular. To appreciate the basis for this intimate link between hookworm and rural soil conditions, first understanding the environmental component of the hookworm life cycle is helpful. Because each female adult N. americanus hookworm living in the human gastrointestinal tract produces approximately 10,000 eggs per day, the feces of infected people Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1136: (2008). C 2008 New York Academy of Sciences. doi: /annals

2 Hotez: Hookworm and Poverty 39 TABLE 1. Hookworm prevalence by region (adapted from Ref. 3) Region No. of estimated hookworm cases (millions) Sub-Saharan Africa 198 East Asia Pacific 149 India and South Asia 130 Latin America and Caribbean 50 China 39 Middle East 10 Total 576 are typically laden with hundreds of thousands of eggs. Under the right conditions, the eggs hatch and give rise to larvae that feed on organic debris and bacteria inthesoil.overseveraldays,theselarvaemolttwiceto the infective larval stages. Hookworm infective larvae are slightly longer than 0.5 mm, and to the naked eye they appear as small white dust specs. The viability of hookworm eggs and larvae depends on whether egg-containing human feces are deposited in an environment where the ambient temperatures are high enough and the soil conditions appropriate for larval development. In his classic monograph, Hookworm Disease, Chandler found that ambient temperatures between 20 Cand30 C are optimal for larval development in the soil but that larval viability still continues even when temperatures rise into the low 40s. 7 Recently, through satellite mapping and remote sensing, Brooker and his colleagues have determined that the environmental stages of hookworm have higher thermal limits than those of other soiltransmitted helminths, such as Ascaris lumbricoides and Trichuris trichiura. This finding accounts for their observation that hookworm is endemic throughout most of Mali and southern Chad, in contrast to ascariasis and trichuriasis. 6,8 On the other hand, hookworms exhibit a lower tolerance for cold temperatures than do either Ascaris ortrichuris, which explains why hookworms are seldom found at high altitudes. 6 In Africa, the geographic range of temperatures and rainfall that make conditions suitable for hookworm larvae in the soil are similar to those conditions required for the Anopheles mosquito vector that transmits malaria. Thus, there is a high degree of geographic overlap and coendemicity between hookworm and malaria in sub-saharan Africa. 9 Soil conditions are equally important for ensuring hookworm larval transmission. Infective larvae directly penetrate human skin, especially the hands and feet, making hookworm endemic in agricultural regions where people expose their skin to the damp and moist earth where hookworm larvae are abundant. For infection to occur, the infective larvae must be able to reach the soil surface. However, the larvae are extremely vulnerable to desiccation and direct sunlight. During dry conditions, the larvae retreat deeper into the soil. Therefore, sufficient rainfall is necessary to support the hookworm life cycle. Soil type is also important. Sandy soils allow greater hookworm mobility than clay soils. Because coastal areas in the developing world have sandy soil, and they are at low altitudes (and therefore high temperatures), these regions can exhibit particularly high hookworm endemicity. 10,11 Consistent with the factors that ensure hookworm endemicity in rural areas and the requirement for soil contact to acquire hookworm are the high rates of infection among agricultural laborers and their families. 6 For instance, a Chinese national parasite survey conducted between the late 1980s and early 1990s, in which fecal exams were conducted on 1,477,742 individuals in every province, found the highest hookworm prevalence among vegetable growers and farmers, 12,13 whereas on the Indian subcontinent, high rates of infection are found in association with working in the tea gardens. 14 Historically, hookworm has been a major occupational hazard for agricultural laborers throughout the developing world (reviewed in Ref. 15). In China and Southeast Asia, the relationship between hookworm and agriculture has been partly linked to the handling of human feces as nightsoil fertilizer 12,13,16 ; however, usually the daily exposure of soil contaminated with hookworm infective larvae mostly accounts for the rural component of hookworm transmission. Effect of Poverty on Hookworm The climate and the sandy soils of the Gulf Coast and the Atlantic Coast of the American South are ideal for propagating the hookworm life cycle. Indeed, at the turn of the 20th century, the coastal regions of East Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas exhibited high prevalence rates of hookworm and other tropical diseases including malaria and typhoid fever, as well as epidemics of yellow fever. Today, hookworm and other tropical diseases no longer occur in the United States because the extreme poverty also needed to sustain the endemicity of these diseases no longer exists. FIGURE 1 shows the relationship between human development index, a measure of poverty, and hookworm infection, as well as showing the tight link between hookworm and poverty. 17 Indeed, several studies have confirmed a significant negative association between socioeconomic status and hookworm infection prevalence or

3 40 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences intensity (number of hookworms per individual). For example, in rural Cote d Ivoire, poor schoolchildren showed a significantly higher infection prevalence of hookworm than that of children of families of better means, 18 whereas in Panama poorer children exhibited higher hookworm intensities. 19 To understand the concept of hookworm intensity, understanding the rest of the parasite life cycle is important. After skin penetration, the larvae enter small blood and lymph vessels and are swept passively via the circulation to the right side of the heart and then to the lungs. From there, the larvae migrate up the respiratory tree and are coughed up and swallowed. In the gut, the larvae develop into sexually mature adult hookworms. The adult female hookworm produces thousands of larvae daily, and the eggs exit the body in the feces. Each adult hookworm causes blood loss ranging from 0.03 to 0.20 ml/day. Higher-intensity infections mean that there are more hookworms causing blood loss, eventually causing enough blood loss to produce hookworm disease, which is characterized by iron deficiency anemia and protein malnutrition. 1 Typically, one assesses hookworm intensity by measuring the number of hookworm eggs in the feces, because higher hookworm burdens lead to higher fecal egg counts. In this way, intensity is better reflective of hookworm disease burden than is prevalence. In many hookworm-endemic communities, the intensity of hookworm increases with age. 20 The relationship between poverty and parasite prevalence and intensity is true not only for hookworm but also for other soiltransmitted helminth infections in developing countries, especially ascariasis. 19,21 23 The exact mechanisms by which poverty leads to higher hookworm prevalence and intensities are still not well established. To date, research has identified at least three major factors: FIGURE 1. Relationship between prevalence of hookworm and poverty. The socioeconomic status of 94 countries was assessed according to several commonly used indicators, with poverty measures divided into quartiles ranging from the most poor (1st quartile), very poor (2nd quartile), poor (3rd quartile), to the least poor (4th quartile). Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals. From DeSilva et al., 17 modified in Hotez et al., 2 with permission. 1. Inadequate sanitation. Because the propagation of the hookworm life cycle depends on inadequate sanitation and the deposition of human feces on soil, hookworm is associated with the absence of alatrine. 24,25 Therefore, people living in poverty who presumably do not have regular access to a latrine would be at higher risk of exposure to hookworm, as well as to other soil-transmitted helminths and schistosomes. 2. Poor housing construction. Cement floors and slabs in homes are a protective factor for transmission. 18 Because cement houses indicate wealth in developing countries, 18 poverty probably operates as a risk factor for hookworm infection partly through the poor housing construction. Poor housing construction with dirt floors, thatch roofs, and walls with cracks and crevices is also responsible for the transmission of Chagas disease in impoverished regions of Central and South America. 3. Access to essential medicines. Better-off families can afford anthelminthic drugs to treat hookworm on a frequent and periodic basis and therefore do not have to depend on government-sponsored deworming programs in schools or those conducted as part of child health days. 18 One of the factors not listed is wearing shoes or other footwear. Shoes are not significantly protective 20 because N. americanus penetrates all aspects of the skin surface, including the hands, although A. duodenale is also orally infective. 1 Poverty Reduction and Urbanization Rural environmental factors and poverty are the two most potent forces in promoting hookworm transmission in developing countries. Conversely, poverty reduction and urbanization are the most important elements for reducing hookworm transmission. Today, the effect of poverty reduction and urbanization is being played out throughout Eastern China where, because of intense economic growth, the prevalence and intensity of hookworm infection have reduced dramatically compared with 20 years earlier. 13,26 In contrast, the poor and largely rural southern and southwest

4 Hotez: Hookworm and Poverty 41 provinces of China, such as Hainan, Sichuan, Yunnan, and Guangxi, remain highly endemic for hookworm and other soil-transmitted helminth infections. 13 There is a common misconception that wearing shoes was responsible for eradicating hookworm in the American South during the early 20th century. Instead, however, the elimination was most likely due to the same forces that are at work in China today, namely, a reduction in poverty together with a shift to a more urbanized economy, which led to a decrease in hookworm, as well as malaria and typhoid fever. Humphreys argues that New Deal legislation passed during the 1930s helped to transform the agrarian landscape of the American South to a more modern and urbanized economy. 27 Over just two decades, rural shacks were demolished and the population of the rural American South began moving into small and large southern cities. 27 These forces, more than any other, dramatically reduced the prevalence of hookworm and the other major tropical diseases in the United States. Hookworm Promotes Poverty Hookworm infection, like other neglected tropical diseases, not only occurs in the setting of poverty but also promotes poverty. Endemic hookworm infection keeps affected populations mired in a cycle of destitution and despair by affecting (1) child growth and development, (2) pregnancy outcome, and (3) worker productivity (reviewed in Ref. 15). These factors also account for the many disability-adjusted life years lost because of hookworm. 1,2 1. Child growth and development. Chronic infection with moderate-intensity and heavy-intensity hookworm burdens in childhood produces longstanding blood loss leading to iron deficiency and protein malnutrition. 1 Chronic anemia from hookworm causes deficits in physical growth and fitness 28 but also produces cognitive deficits and memory loss. 29 The older literature even points to reduction in intelligence resulting from heavy infections (reviewed in Ref. 30). As a result, hookworm-infected children attend school less often and exhibit diminished school performance. 31,32 The economist Hoyt Bleakley estimates that chronic hookworm infection in childhood, presumably through the mechanisms outlined above, reduces future wage earning capacity by 43%. 33 There is also a high degree of coendemicity between hookworm and malaria, 9 resulting in more severe anemia, and possible synergistic effects, including more clinical episodes of malaria as well as increased severity, 4 which also fuel poverty. 2. Pregnancy outcome. Hookworm is also a major global public health problem in pregnancy. An estimated 44 million pregnant women are infected with hookworm, 34 including 7.5 million women in sub-saharan Africa. 35 Particularly among multigravidae, hookworm anemia results in low birth weight and increased perinatal morbidity and mortality. 36,37 Significant comorbidity between hookworm and malaria anemia is also likely Worker productivity. The effect of hookworm anemia on agricultural worker productivity was a topic widely written about during the early 20th century 7 and has been reviewed. 15 We are still in the early stages of fully assessing the economic and poverty-promoting effect of hookworm infection and other neglected tropical diseases. 5 However, such assessments are a high priority given the emerging evidence that hookworm and other neglected tropical diseases are not only significant global health problems but also important impediments to economic development. Hookworm is an important component of the sixth Millennium Development Goal, to combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases. Hookworm Control as a Means to Economic Growth As urbanization and poverty reduction expand in the largest middle-income countries, especially Brazil, China, and India, we can expect significant global reductions in the prevalence of hookworm infection in the next few decades. However, the lowest-income countries are unlikely to benefit from these economic gains, so hookworm reduction will require more specific interventions. Without economic development, sanitation, and provision of drainage, factors such as sewerage, clean water, and other environmental measures often only minimally affect the prevalence and intensity of hookworm infection. For instance, in Iran, a program of sanitation as a solitary measure reduced the prevalence of hookworm only 4%, from 71% to 68% prevalence, 38,39 whereas drainage and sewerage in a poor urban area of Salvador, Brazil, did not affect hookworm intensity. 40 The possibility that environmental control alone has minimal effect on hookworm transmission urgently

5 42 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences requires additional and larger studies. Currently, the major and most cost-effective approach to hookworm control worldwide is the regular and periodic use of anthelminthic drugs (typically albendazole or mebendazole), particularly to deworm school children. There are multiple benefits to periodic deworming, including catch-up growth, as well as improvements in physical fitness, cognition, memory, school performance, and school attendance. 1,29,31,32 These findings provided a basis for World Health Assembly adoption of a resolution in 2001 that advocates for periodic deworming of all school children at risk for soil-transmitted helminths, including hookworm ( The World Health Organization currently recommends annual treatments of at-risk children with single-dose mebendazole or albendazole, or twice-yearly or thriceyearly treatments in areas of high intensity infection and transmission. Widespread implementation of deworming should significantly affect economic development. 15,41 To enhance the poverty-reducing effect of deworming, albendazole (or mebendazole, depending on availability) is also being packaged with other drugs, including ivermectin, praziquantel, and azithromycin, to simultaneously target the seven most prevalent neglected tropical diseases ascariasis, trichuriasis, hookworm, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, trachoma, and onchocerciasis. 4,42 The package is extremely lowcost, estimated at approximately just $0.50 per patient per year, because the drugs are either being donated by pharmaceutical companies or they are available as lowcost generics. Integrated control of neglected tropical diseases represents one of the most efficient and costeffective means to improve child health and education, pregnancy outcome, and worker productivity, as well as to reduce anemia and prevent blindness and skin disease. 4,42 Integrated control of the neglected tropical diseases could reduce the burden of disease caused by malaria and HIV/AIDS. 4 To coordinate integration, the major partnerships dedicated to neglected tropical disease control have joined in an alliance known as the Global Network for Neglected Tropical Disease Control. 5 Integrated control through a package of low-cost drugs is currently the means being widely advocated for controlling the most common neglected tropical diseases in developing countries and as a means for sustainable poverty reduction. 5 However, for regions of high-intensity hookworm, relying solely on albendazole or mebendazole may not be adequate for control. Studies conducted over the last decade have revealed that single-dose mebendazole often achieves a lower than expected cure rate for hookworm or results in rapid posttreatment reinfection. Also, frequent use of anthelminthics reduces efficacy over time and may lead to drug resistance (reviewed in Refs. 5 and 43). Through the Human Hookworm Vaccine Initiative, a product development partnership based at the Sabin Vaccine Institute and funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, development and testing of recombinant hookworm vaccines are under way. 2,15,43,44 The goal of the Human Hookworm Vaccine Initiative is to create a vaccine to prevent hookworm reinfection and disease. The Human Hookworm Vaccine represents one of several possible antipoverty vaccines, that is, vaccines for poverty-promoting neglected tropical diseases, that could be developed in the coming decade. There is an urgent need for financial innovation to support the development of vaccines intended exclusively for the world s poorest people. Acknowledgments Peter Hotez is partially supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation through the Human Hookworm Vaccine Initiative. References 1. HOTEZ, P.J., S. BROOKER,J.M.BETHONY, et al Hookworm infection. New England Journal of Medicine 351: HOTEZ, P.J., J. BETHONY, M.E.BOTTAZZI, et al The great infection of mankind. PLoS Medicine 2: e BETHONY, J.,S.BROOKER, M.ALBONICO, et al Soiltransmitted helminth infections: ascariasis, trichuriasis, and hookworm. Lancet 367: HOTEZ, P.J., D.H. MOLYNEUX, A.FENWICK, et al Incorporating a rapid-impact package for neglected tropical diseases with programs for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. PLoS Medicine 3: e HOTEZ, P.J., D.H. MOLYNEUX,A.FENWICK, et al Control of neglected tropical diseases. New England Journal of Medicine 80: BROOKER,S.,J.BETHONY &P.J.HOTEZ Human hookworm infection in the 21st century. Advances in Parasitology 58: CHANDLER, A.C Hookworm disease. Its Distribution, Biology, Epidemiology, Pathology, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Control. Macmillan. New York. 8. BROOKER, S., N.M.R. BEASLEY, M. NDINAROMTAN, et al Use of remote sensing and a geographical information system in a national helminth control programme in Chad. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 80: BROOKER, S.,A.C.CLEMENTS, P.J.HOTEZ, et al The co-distribution of Plasmodium falciparum and hookworm among African schoolchildren. Malaria Journal 5: 99.

6 Hotez: Hookworm and Poverty MABASO, M.L.H., C.C. APPLETON, J.C. HUGHES & E. GOUWS The effect of soil type and climate on hookworm (Necator americanus) distribution in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Tropical Medicine and International Health 8: MABASO, M.L.H., C.C. APPLETON, J.C. HUGHES & E. GOUWS.2004.Hookworm (Necator americanus) transmission in inland areas of sandy soils in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Tropical Medicine and International Health 9: HOTEZ, P.J., Z. FENG, L.Q.XU, et al Emerging and reemerging helminthiases and the public health of China. Emerging Infectious Diseases 3: HOTEZ, P.J China s hookworms. China Quarterly 172: GILGEN, D.,C.G.N.MASCIE-TAYLOR &L.ROSETTA Intestinal helminth infections, anaemia and labour productivity of female tea pluckers in Bangladesh. Tropical Medicine and International Health 6: HOTEZ, P.J.& M. FERRIS The antipoverty vaccines. Vaccine 24: HUMPHRIES, D.L., L.S. STEPHENSON, E.J.PEARCE, et al The use of human faeces for fertilizer is associated with increased intensity of hookworm infection in Vietnamese women. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 91: DESILVA, N.R., S. BROOKER, P.J.HOTEZ, et al Soiltransmitted helminth infections: updating the global picture. Trends in Parasitology 19: RASO, G., J. UTZINGER, K.D. SILUE, et al Disparities in parasitic infections, perceived ill health and access to health care among poorer and less poor schoolchildren of rural Cote d Ivoire. Tropical Medicine and International Health 10: HOLLAND, C.V., D.L. TAREN, D.W.T. CROMPTON, et al Intestinal helminthiases in relation to the socioeconomic environment of Panamanian children. Social Science and Medicine 26: BETHONY, J.,J.CHEN, S.LIN, et al Emerging patterns of hookworm infection influence of aging on the intensity of Necator infection in Hainan Province, People s Republic of China. Clinical Infectious Diseases 35: KIGHTLINGER,L.,J.SEED &M.KIGHTLINGER Ascaris lumbricoides intensity in relation to environmental, socioeconomic, and behavioral determinants of exposure to infection in children from southeast Madagascar. Journal of Parasitology 84: SMITH, H.M., R. DEKAMINSKY,S.NIWAS, et al Prevalence and intensity of infections of Ascaris lumbricoides and Trichuris trichiura and associated socio-demographic variables in four rural Honduran communities. Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 96: CARNEIRO, F.F., E. CIFUENTES, M.M. TELLEZ-ROJO & I. ROMIEU The risk of Ascaris lumbricoides infection in children as an environmental health indicator to guide preventive activities in Caparao and Alto Caparao, Brazil. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 80: CHONGSUVIVATWONG, V., S. PAS-ONG, D. MCNAIL, et al Predictors for the risk of hookworm infection: experience from endemic villages in southern Thailand. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 90: OLSEN,A.,H.SAMUELSEN &W.ONYANGO-OUMA A study of risk factors for intestinal helminth infections using epidemiological and anthropological approaches. Journal of Biosocial Science 33: FENGHUA, S.,W.ZHONGXING, Q.YIXING, et al Epidemiology of human intestinal nematode infections in Wujiang and Pizhou counties, Jiangsu Province, China. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health 29: HUMPHREYS, M Malaria, Poverty, Race, and Public Health in the United States. The Johns Hopkins University Press, pp CROMPTON, D.W.& M.C. NESHEIM Nutritional impact of intestinal helminthiasis during the human life cycle. Annual Review of Nutrition 22: SAKTI, H., C. NOKES, W.S. HERTANTO, et al Evidence for an association between hookworm infection and cognitive function in Indonesia school children. Tropical Medicine and International Health 4: HOTEZ, P.J Hookworm disease in children. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Journal 8: MIGUEL, E.A.& M. KREMER Worms: identifying impacts on education and health in the presence of treatment externalities. Econometrica 72: WORLD BANK School deworming at a glance. World Bank. Washington, DC. org/intphaag/resources/aagdewormingeng pdf. 33. BLEAKLEY, H Disease and development: evidence from hookworm eradication in the American South. Quarterly Journal of Economics 122: BUNDY, D.A., M.S. CHAN & L. SAVIOLI Hookworm infection in pregnancy. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 89: CROMPTON, D.W The public health importance of hookworm disease. Parasitology 121(Suppl): S GUYATT, H.L., S. BROOKER, N.PESHU &C.E.SHULMAN Hookworm and anaemia prevalence. Lancet 356: CHRISTIAN,P.,S.K.KHATRY &K.P.WEST Antenatal anthelmintic treatment, birthweight, and infant survival in rural Nepal. Lancet 364: ARFAA,F.,G.H.SAHBA,J.FARAHMANDIAN &H.JALALI Evaluation of the effect of different methods of control of soil-transmitted helminths in Khuzestan, southwest Iran. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 26: ASAOLU, S.O. & I.E. OFOEZIE The role of health education and sanitation in the control of helminth infections. Acta Tropica 86: MORAES, L.R.S., J. AZEVEDO CANCIO &S.CAIRNCROSS Impact of drainage and sewerage on intestinal nematode infections in poor urban areas in Salvador, Brazil.

7 44 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 98: SAVIOLI, L., D. ENGELS & H. ENDO Extending the benefits of deworming for development. Lancet 365: MOLYNEUX, D.H., P.J. HOTEZ &A.FENWICK Rapidimpact interventions : how a policy of integrated control for Africa s neglected tropical diseases could benefit the poor. PLoS Medicine 2: e HOTEZ, P.J., J. BETHONY, M.E.BOTTAZZI, et al New technologies for the control of human hookworm infection. Trends in Parasitology 22: DIEMERT, D.,J.BETHONY &P.J.HOTEZ Hookworm vaccines. Clinical Infectious Diseases; in press.

School-based Deworming Interventions: An Overview

School-based Deworming Interventions: An Overview School-based Deworming Interventions: An Overview Description of the tool: Because helminth (worm) infections can undermine the benefits of school feeding, the WFP encourages deworming interventions and

More information

HOOKWORM FAQ SHEET (rev ) Adapted from the CDC Fact Sheet

HOOKWORM FAQ SHEET (rev ) Adapted from the CDC Fact Sheet HOOKWORM FAQ SHEET (rev 3-1-10) Adapted from the CDC Fact Sheet Hookworm Infection FAQ Sheet Contents What is hookworm? Where are hookworms commonly found? How do I get a hookworm infection? Who is at

More information

Intestinal Worms CHILDREN SAY THAT WE CAN. Intestinal worms affect millions of children worldwide.

Intestinal Worms CHILDREN SAY THAT WE CAN. Intestinal worms affect millions of children worldwide. Intestinal worms affect millions of children worldwide. Older children can learn and share knowledge about the life cycle of intestinal worms, the available treatment for worms and what they can do to

More information

Hookworm: The Great Infection of Mankind

Hookworm: The Great Infection of Mankind Neglected Diseases Open access, freely available online Hookworm: The Great Infection of Mankind Peter J. Hotez*, Jeff Bethony, Maria Elena Bottazzi, Simon Brooker, Paulo Buss Introduction In 1962, Norman

More information

Module 1. Introduction to Targeted Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs)

Module 1. Introduction to Targeted Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) TARGETED FOR CONTROL OR Module 1. Introduction to Targeted Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) Overview Road map to NTDs targeted for Preventive Chemotherapy (PC) Disease specific epidemiology and control

More information

Intestinal parasitic infections are a serious

Intestinal parasitic infections are a serious Paediatrica Indonesiana VOLUME 54 March NUMBER 2 Original Article Albendazole alone vs. albendazole and diethylcarbamazine combination therapy for trichuriasis Windya Sari Nasution, Muhammad Ali, Ayodhia

More information

Inter-Agency Donor Group meeting Hunger, Health and Climate Change: prioritizing research effort in the livestock sector

Inter-Agency Donor Group meeting Hunger, Health and Climate Change: prioritizing research effort in the livestock sector Inter-Agency Donor Group meeting Hunger, Health and Climate Change: prioritizing research effort in the livestock sector "Integrated Control of Neglected Zoonotic Diseases" By F.X. Meslin Leader, Neglected

More information

Neglected Zoonoses in Public Health Perspectives

Neglected Zoonoses in Public Health Perspectives Neglected Zoonoses in Public Health Perspectives Neglected Tropical Diseases Towards control and elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases FAO-APHCA/OIE/USDA Regional Workshop on Prevention and Control

More information

Module 6. Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E)

Module 6. Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) Overview 1) Current situation on NTD drug resistance: Accelerating work in NTDs and lessons from livestock. Reports of reduced efficacy in NTDs: evidence to date. Causes of reduced efficacy other than

More information

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 5 October [without reference to a Main Committee (A/71/L.2)]

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 5 October [without reference to a Main Committee (A/71/L.2)] United Nations A/RES/71/3 General Assembly Distr.: General 19 October 2016 Seventy-first session Agenda item 127 Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 5 October 2016 [without reference to a Main

More information

IMPACT OF A FILARIASIS CONTROL PROGRAM ON INTESTINAL HELMINTHIC INFECTIONS; A PILOT STUDY IN NARATHIWAT PROVINCE, THAILAND

IMPACT OF A FILARIASIS CONTROL PROGRAM ON INTESTINAL HELMINTHIC INFECTIONS; A PILOT STUDY IN NARATHIWAT PROVINCE, THAILAND IMPACT OF A FILARIASIS CONTROL PROGRAM ON INTESTINAL HELMINTHIC INFECTIONS; A PILOT STUDY IN NARATHIWAT PROVINCE, THAILAND Sumart Loymek 1, Sirichit Wongkamchai 2, Therayot Kob-asa 3, Wej Choochote 4,

More information

Large Animal Topics in Parasitology for the Veterinary Technician Jason Roberts, DVM This presentation is designed to review the value veterinary

Large Animal Topics in Parasitology for the Veterinary Technician Jason Roberts, DVM This presentation is designed to review the value veterinary Large Animal Topics in Parasitology for the Veterinary Technician Jason Roberts, DVM This presentation is designed to review the value veterinary technicians can add to mixed or large animal practices

More information

A review of Filariasis

A review of Filariasis International Journal of Current Research in Medical Sciences ISSN: 2454-5716 P-ISJN: A4372-3064, E -ISJN: A4372-3061 www.ijcrims.com Review Article Volume 5, Issue 2-2019 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.22192/ijcrms.2019.05.02.005

More information

NEWSLETTER. ACTION AGAINST WORMS RE-LAUNCHING ACTION AGAINST WORMS

NEWSLETTER.  ACTION AGAINST WORMS RE-LAUNCHING ACTION AGAINST WORMS ACTION AGAINST WORMS AUGUST 2007 ISSUE 9 IN THIS ISSUE: Re-launching Action Against Worms What does integrated preventive chemotherapy mean and not mean? Seven reasons why integration is logical The drugs

More information

STUDIES ON THE PREVALENCE OF HOOKWORM INFECTION AMONGST RURAL FARMERS IN EMOHUA L.G.A, RIVERS STATE

STUDIES ON THE PREVALENCE OF HOOKWORM INFECTION AMONGST RURAL FARMERS IN EMOHUA L.G.A, RIVERS STATE International Journal of Physical and Social Science Vol. 7 Issue 12, December 2017 ISSN: 2249-5894 Impact Factor: 6.644 Journal Homepage: Double-Blind Peer Reviewed Refereed Open Access International

More information

STUDIES ON THE PREVALENCE OF HOOKWORM INFECTION AMONGST RURAL FARMERS IN EMOHUA L.G.A, RIVERS STATE.

STUDIES ON THE PREVALENCE OF HOOKWORM INFECTION AMONGST RURAL FARMERS IN EMOHUA L.G.A, RIVERS STATE. International Journal of Research in Social Sciences Vol. 7 Issue 10, October 2017, ISSN: 2249-2496 Impact Factor: 7.081 Journal Homepage: Double-Blind Peer Reviewed Refereed Open Access International

More information

Report by the Director-General

Report by the Director-General WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION ORGANISATION MONDIALE DE LA SANTÉ A31/2З 29 March 1978 THIRTY-FIRST WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY Provisional agenda item 2.6.12 f- 6-0- {/> >/\ PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF ZOONOSES AND

More information

Jaipur Declaration on Antimicrobial Resistance

Jaipur Declaration on Antimicrobial Resistance Jaipur Declaration on Antimicrobial Resistance We, the Health Ministers of Member States of the WHO South-East Asia Region participating in the Twenty-ninth Health Ministers Meeting in Jaipur, India, appreciate

More information

Situation update of dengue in the SEA Region, 2010

Situation update of dengue in the SEA Region, 2010 Situation update of dengue in the SEA Region, 21 The global situation of Dengue It is estimated that nearly 5 million dengue infections occur annually in the world. Although dengue has a global distribution,

More information

Supplementary webappendix

Supplementary webappendix Supplementary webappendix This webappendix formed part of the original submission and has been peer reviewed. We post it as supplied by the authors. Supplement to: Moser W, Coulibaly JT, Ali SM, et al.

More information

Kraichat.tan@mahidol.ac.th 1 Outline Vector Borne Disease The linkage of CC&VBD VBD Climate Change and VBD Adaptation for risk minimization Adaptation Acknowledgement: data supported from WHO//www.who.org

More information

Drug combinations against soiltransmitted

Drug combinations against soiltransmitted Jennifer Keiser Helminth Drug Development Unit Department of Medical Parasitology and Infection Biology Swiss TPH Winter Symposium 2017 Helminth Infection from Transmission to Control Drug combinations

More information

Efficacy of co-administration of albendazole and diethylcarbamazine against geohelminthiases: a study from South India

Efficacy of co-administration of albendazole and diethylcarbamazine against geohelminthiases: a study from South India Tropical Medicine and International Health volume 7 no 6 pp 541 548 june 2002 Efficacy of co-administration of albendazole and diethylcarbamazine against geohelminthiases: a study from South India T. R.

More information

Chapter 9. General discussion

Chapter 9. General discussion Chapter 9 General discussion Chapter 9 General Discussion Ever since the inception of research into human oesophagostomiasis in northern Ghana and Togo just over two decades ago, Oesophagostomum infection

More information

Hygiene Improvement and the MDGs

Hygiene Improvement and the MDGs Hygiene Improvement and the MDGs Lessons from USAID/EHP Experience 1999-2004 San Juan, Puerto Rico, 8-21-04 Importance of hygiene improvement to achieving the MDGs The Hygiene Improvement Framework (HIF)

More information

IN THIS ISSUE: What should programme managers know when they are treating young children? Your response has been overwhelmingly positive.

IN THIS ISSUE: What should programme managers know when they are treating young children? Your response has been overwhelmingly positive. ACTION AGAINST WORMS AUGUST 2007 ISSUE 9 IN THIS ISSUE: A school girl in Nepal Re-launching Action Against Worms What does integrated preventive chemotherapy mean and not mean? The drugs and thresholds

More information

INTERNAL PARASITES OF SHEEP AND GOATS

INTERNAL PARASITES OF SHEEP AND GOATS 7 INTERNAL PARASITES OF SHEEP AND GOATS These diseases are known to occur in Afghanistan. 1. Definition Parasitism and gastrointestinal nematode parasitism in particular, is arguably the most serious constraint

More information

SUMMARY. Mosquitoes are surviving on earth since millions of years. They are the

SUMMARY. Mosquitoes are surviving on earth since millions of years. They are the SUMMARY Mosquitoes are surviving on earth since millions of years. They are the important carriers of various diseases like malaria, dengue, filaria, Japanese encephalitis, west nile virus and chikun gunia.

More information

Human soil-transmitted helminths: implications of mass drug administration

Human soil-transmitted helminths: implications of mass drug administration REVIEW C URRENT OPINION Human soil-transmitted helminths: implications of mass drug administration Jozef Vercruysse a, Bruno Levecke a, and Roger Prichard b Purpose of review With the London Declaration

More information

Monitoring gonococcal antimicrobial susceptibility

Monitoring gonococcal antimicrobial susceptibility Monitoring gonococcal antimicrobial susceptibility The rapidly changing antimicrobial susceptibility of Neisseria gonorrhoeae has created an important public health problem. Because of widespread resistance

More information

TRYPANOSOMIASIS IN TANZANIA

TRYPANOSOMIASIS IN TANZANIA TDR-IDRC RESEARCH INITIATIVE ON VECTOR BORNE DISEASES IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE FINDINGS FOR POLICY MAKERS TRYPANOSOMIASIS IN TANZANIA THE DISEASE: Trypanosomiasis Predicting vulnerability and improving

More information

GOOD GOVERNANCE OF VETERINARY SERVICES AND THE OIE PVS PATHWAY

GOOD GOVERNANCE OF VETERINARY SERVICES AND THE OIE PVS PATHWAY GOOD GOVERNANCE OF VETERINARY SERVICES AND THE OIE PVS PATHWAY Regional Information Seminar for Recently Appointed OIE Delegates 18 20 February 2014, Brussels, Belgium Dr Mara Gonzalez 1 OIE Regional Activities

More information

Antimicrobial Stewardship in the Hospital Setting

Antimicrobial Stewardship in the Hospital Setting GUIDE TO INFECTION CONTROL IN THE HOSPITAL CHAPTER 12 Antimicrobial Stewardship in the Hospital Setting Authors Dan Markley, DO, MPH, Amy L. Pakyz, PharmD, PhD, Michael Stevens, MD, MPH Chapter Editor

More information

Health-Education Package to Prevent Worm Infections in Chinese Schoolchildren

Health-Education Package to Prevent Worm Infections in Chinese Schoolchildren T h e n e w e ngl a nd j o u r na l o f m e dic i n e original article Health-Education Package to Prevent Worm Infections in Chinese Schoolchildren Franziska A. Bieri, M.Sc., Darren J. Gray, Ph.D., Gail

More information

Changes in Vectors Creating an Emerging Heartworm Disease

Changes in Vectors Creating an Emerging Heartworm Disease Changes in Vectors Creating an Emerging Heartworm Disease Emerging Heartworm Disease: Part 1 Heartworm disease was first discovered in 1626 in Italy, reported in dogs in the United States in 1847, and

More information

Effects of Deworming on Malnourished Preschool Children in India: An Open-Labelled, Cluster-Randomized Trial

Effects of Deworming on Malnourished Preschool Children in India: An Open-Labelled, Cluster-Randomized Trial Effects of Deworming on Malnourished Preschool Children in India: An Open-Labelled, Cluster-Randomized Trial The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits

More information

Hookworms in Dogs & Cats Blood-Sucking Parasites in our Pets

Hookworms in Dogs & Cats Blood-Sucking Parasites in our Pets Hookworms in Dogs & Cats Blood-Sucking Parasites in our Pets Recently I came across a news story of a couple who visited the Dominican Republic. While in the tropical paradise, they became infected with

More information

Progress Update December 2016 Nepal

Progress Update December 2016 Nepal Sustainable Sanitation and Hygiene For All Programme Progress Update December 2016 Nepal By December 2016, 334,589 people had gained access to new and improved in seven districts since 2014 under the Sustainable

More information

Order Strongylida. Superfamilies: Trichostrongyloidea Strongyloidea Metastrongyloidea Ancylostomatoidea (hookworms)

Order Strongylida. Superfamilies: Trichostrongyloidea Strongyloidea Metastrongyloidea Ancylostomatoidea (hookworms) Order Strongylida Superfamilies: Trichostrongyloidea Strongyloidea Metastrongyloidea Ancylostomatoidea (hookworms) ORDER STRONGYLIDA - Bursate worms Superfamily - Ancylostomatoidea HOOKWORMS *dorsally

More information

Chapter 6 TREATMENT OF MIXED OESOPHAGOSTOMUM AND HOOKWORM INFECTION: EFFECT OF ALBENDAZOLE, PYRANTEL PAMOATE, LEVAMISOLE AND THIABENDAZOLE

Chapter 6 TREATMENT OF MIXED OESOPHAGOSTOMUM AND HOOKWORM INFECTION: EFFECT OF ALBENDAZOLE, PYRANTEL PAMOATE, LEVAMISOLE AND THIABENDAZOLE Chapter TREATMENT OF MIXED OESOPHAGOSTOMUM AND HOOKWORM INFECTION: EFFECT OF ALBENDAZOLE, PYRANTEL PAMOATE, LEVAMISOLE AND THIABENDAZOLE HP Krepel, T Haring, S Baeta and AM Polderman Published in the Transactions

More information

Rabies Research & Impact

Rabies Research & Impact Rabies Research & Impact Katie.Hampson@glasgow.ac.uk Tiziana.Lembo@glasgow.ac.uk Sarah.Cleaveland@glasgow.ac.uk Daniel.Haydon@glasgow.ac.uk Jim.Caryl@glasgow.ac.uk Dog vaccination Surveillance Community

More information

Vector Control in emergencies

Vector Control in emergencies OBJECTIVE Kenya WASH Cluster Training for Emergencies Oct 2008 3.06 - Vector Control in emergencies To provide practical guidance and an overview of vector control in emergency situations It will introduce

More information

Hosted by Dr. Benedetta Allegranzi, WHO Patient Safety Agency A Webber Training Teleclass

Hosted by Dr. Benedetta Allegranzi, WHO Patient Safety Agency A Webber Training Teleclass The History of Medicine Antimicrobial Resistance Issues Worldwide and the WHO Approach to Combat It Carmem Lúcia Pessoa-Silva, MD, PhD Health Security and Environment Cluster, WHO HQ, Geneva Hosted by

More information

Albendazole for pinworms

Albendazole for pinworms Albendazole for pinworms Detailed Albendazole dosage information for adults and TEENren. Includes dosages for Ascariasis, Pinworm Infection (Enterobius vermicularis), Hookworm Infection. Best sale albendazole

More information

Antimicrobial Resistance Initiative

Antimicrobial Resistance Initiative Antimicrobial Resistance Initiative Antimicrobial Resistance Initiative Resistance to antimicrobial agents has become a threat to public health all over the world. Microorganisms become resistant to antimicrobial

More information

Parasites in Sheep Flocks

Parasites in Sheep Flocks Parasites in Sheep Flocks 1 WHAT IS NEW IN PARASITE CONTROL FOR SHEEP FLOCKS? Drew E. Hunnisett, DVM Honeywood and Warder Veterinary Services 132 Commerce Park Drive, Unit N Barrie, Ontario L4N 8W8 705

More information

EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING ZOONOTIC PARASITES: PREVENTIVE AND CONTROL STRATEGIES

EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING ZOONOTIC PARASITES: PREVENTIVE AND CONTROL STRATEGIES International Journal of Science, Environment and Technology, Vol. 5, No 3, 2016, 935 940 ISSN 2278-3687 (O) 2277-663X (P) EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING ZOONOTIC PARASITES: PREVENTIVE AND CONTROL STRATEGIES

More information

ORIGINAL ARTICLES. Efficacy of albendazole against the whipworm Trichuris trichiura a randomised, controlled trial

ORIGINAL ARTICLES. Efficacy of albendazole against the whipworm Trichuris trichiura a randomised, controlled trial Efficacy of albendazole against the whipworm Trichuris trichiura a randomised, controlled trial V J Adams, C J Lombard, M A Dhansay, M B Markus, J E Fincham Objectives and design. To test the efficacy

More information

HUSK, LUNGWORMS AND CATTLE

HUSK, LUNGWORMS AND CATTLE Vet Times The website for the veterinary profession https://www.vettimes.co.uk HUSK, LUNGWORMS AND CATTLE Author : Alastair Hayton Categories : Vets Date : July 20, 2009 Alastair Hayton discusses how best

More information

Elephantiasis. C h r i s t i a n H e s s. N u t r i t i o n R o n V e r n o n

Elephantiasis. C h r i s t i a n H e s s. N u t r i t i o n R o n V e r n o n Elephantiasis C h r i s t i a n H e s s N u t r i t i o n 1 0 2 0 R o n V e r n o n 11-29-11 Elephantiasis Elephantiasis or Lymphatic Filariasis is defined by The Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series,

More information

HEARTWORM DISEASE AND THE DAMAGE DONE

HEARTWORM DISEASE AND THE DAMAGE DONE HEARTWORM DISEASE AND THE DAMAGE DONE Stephen Jones, DVM There are now more months of the year where environmental conditions favor mosquito survival and reproduction. Warmer temperatures Indoor environments

More information

OIE global strategy for rabies control, including regional vaccine banks

OIE global strategy for rabies control, including regional vaccine banks Inception meeting of the OIE/JTF Project for Controlling Zoonoses in Asia under the One Health Concept OIE global strategy for rabies control, including regional vaccine banks Tokyo, Japan 19-20 December

More information

Kala-azar: azar: Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled?

Kala-azar: azar: Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled? Kala-azar: azar: Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled? R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick Honorary Research Investigator (Division of Biology, Imperial College, London, UK) Global Health Histories Series

More information

HOOKWORM INFECTIONS OF SCHOOLCHILDREN IN SOUTHERN THAILAND

HOOKWORM INFECTIONS OF SCHOOLCHILDREN IN SOUTHERN THAILAND SOUTHEAST ASIAN J TROP MED PUBLIC HEALTH HOOKWORM INFECTIONS OF SCHOOLCHILDREN IN SOUTHERN THAILAND Malinee T Anantaphruti, Wanna Maipanich, Chatree Muennoo, Somchit Pubampen and Surapol Sanguankiat Department

More information

Summary of the Nutrition and Health Assessment in Karamoja Region (February 2008)

Summary of the Nutrition and Health Assessment in Karamoja Region (February 2008) Summary of the Nutrition and Health Assessment in Karamoja Region (February 2008) Background Karamoja is a semi-arid area covering approximately 27,200 square kilometers. It borders Kapchorwa and Kumi

More information

Economic Impact of Dengue in LAC and the World

Economic Impact of Dengue in LAC and the World Economic Impact of Dengue in LAC and the World Matheus Takatu Barros Donald S. Shepard, PhD Heller School for Social Policy and Management Brandeis University, Waltham, MA USA mtakatu@brandeis.edu shepard@brandeis.edu

More information

Parasite control in beef and dairy cattle

Parasite control in beef and dairy cattle Vet Times The website for the veterinary profession https://www.vettimes.co.uk Parasite control in beef and dairy cattle Author : Louise Silk Categories : Farm animal, Vets Date : August 22, 2016 Control

More information

Characterization of Haemonchus contortus

Characterization of Haemonchus contortus Nineteen percent of producers used anthelmintics exclusively in parasite management. Eighty percent use some form of pasture rest and/or rotation, 31 percent graze fields, and 7 percent are attempting

More information

Reducing the incidence of malaria

Reducing the incidence of malaria Reducing the incidence of malaria thereby helping others so they too can lead healthy lives Activities for young people Activity type Age range resources 1 Incidence of malaria Group All Images, video

More information

Questions and Answers on the Community Animal Health Policy

Questions and Answers on the Community Animal Health Policy MEMO/07/365 Brussels, 19 September 2007 Questions and Answers on the Community Animal Health Policy 2007-13 Why has the Commission developed a new Community Animal Health Policy (CAHP)? The EU plays a

More information

Antihelminthic Trematodes (flukes): Cestodes (tapeworms): Nematodes (roundworms, pinworm, whipworms and hookworms):

Antihelminthic Trematodes (flukes): Cestodes (tapeworms): Nematodes (roundworms, pinworm, whipworms and hookworms): Antihelminthic Drugs used to treat parasitic worm infections: helminthic infections Unlike protozoa, helminthes are large and have complex cellular structures It is very important to identify the causative

More information

Global Strategies to Address AMR Carmem Lúcia Pessoa-Silva, MD, PhD Antimicrobial Resistance Secretariat

Global Strategies to Address AMR Carmem Lúcia Pessoa-Silva, MD, PhD Antimicrobial Resistance Secretariat Global Strategies to Address AMR Carmem Lúcia Pessoa-Silva, MD, PhD Antimicrobial Resistance Secretariat EMA Working Parties with Patients and Consumers Organisations (PCWP) and Healthcare Professionals

More information

Feline and Canine Internal Parasites

Feline and Canine Internal Parasites Feline and Canine Internal Parasites Internal parasites are a very common problem among dogs. Almost all puppies are already infected with roundworm when still in the uterus, or get the infection immediately

More information

Diagnosing intestinal parasites. Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing

Diagnosing intestinal parasites. Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing Diagnosing intestinal parasites Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing Screen every dog at least twice a year The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) guidelines recommend including

More information

A Global Health Workforce Through a One Health Framework: A Public Health Perspective. Traditional Subjects in Schools of Public Health

A Global Health Workforce Through a One Health Framework: A Public Health Perspective. Traditional Subjects in Schools of Public Health A Global Health Workforce Through a One Health Framework: A Public Health Perspective Laura H. Kahn, MD, MPH, MPP Institute of Medicine Global Forum on Innovation in Health Professional Education April

More information

WHO s first global report on antibiotic resistance reveals serious, worldwide threat to public health

WHO s first global report on antibiotic resistance reveals serious, worldwide threat to public health New WHO report provides the most comprehensive picture of antibiotic resistance to date, with data from 114 countries 30 APRIL 2014 GENEVA - A new report by WHO its first to look at antimicrobial resistance,

More information

Management And Treatment Of Tropical Diseases By B. G. Maegraith

Management And Treatment Of Tropical Diseases By B. G. Maegraith Management And Treatment Of Tropical Diseases By B. G. Maegraith If you are searching for a ebook Management and Treatment of Tropical Diseases by B. G. Maegraith in pdf form, then you have come on to

More information

running head: SUPERBUGS Humphreys 1

running head: SUPERBUGS Humphreys 1 running head: SUPERBUGS Humphreys 1 Superbugs GCH 360 Term Paper Assignment Kelly Humphreys April 30, 2014 SUPERBUGS Humphreys 2 Introduction The World Health Organization (WHO) recognizes antibiotic resistance

More information

Diagnosing intestinal parasites. Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing

Diagnosing intestinal parasites. Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing Diagnosing intestinal parasites Clinical reference guide for Fecal Dx antigen testing Screen every dog at least twice a year The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) guidelines recommend including

More information

Mary H Hodges 1*, Nsa Dada 2, Anna Warmsley 2, Jusufu Paye 1, Momodu M Bangura 3, Emanuel Nyorkor 4, Mustapha Sonnie 1 and Yaobi Zhang 5.

Mary H Hodges 1*, Nsa Dada 2, Anna Warmsley 2, Jusufu Paye 1, Momodu M Bangura 3, Emanuel Nyorkor 4, Mustapha Sonnie 1 and Yaobi Zhang 5. RESEARCH ARTICLE Open Access Mass drug administration significantly reduces infection of Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm in school children in the national control program in Sierra Leone Mary H Hodges

More information

OIE Regional Commission for Europe Regional Work Plan Framework Version adopted during the 85 th OIE General Session (Paris, May 2017)

OIE Regional Commission for Europe Regional Work Plan Framework Version adopted during the 85 th OIE General Session (Paris, May 2017) OIE Regional Commission for Europe Regional Work Plan Framework 2017-2020 Version adopted during the 85 th OIE General Session (Paris, May 2017) Chapter 1 - Regional Directions 1.1. Introduction The slogan

More information

Multi- sectoral strategy for brucellosis control in peri- urban dairy production zones of West and Central Africa

Multi- sectoral strategy for brucellosis control in peri- urban dairy production zones of West and Central Africa Multi- sectoral strategy for brucellosis control in peri- urban dairy production zones of West and Central Africa DAKAR 15-18 June 2015 Project sponsors and partners This project is supported by a grant

More information

Promoting One Health : the international perspective OIE

Promoting One Health : the international perspective OIE Promoting One Health : the international perspective OIE Integrating Animal Health & Public Health: Antimicrobial Resistance SADC SPS Training Workshop (Animal Health) 29-31 January 2014 Gaborone, Botwana

More information

Taking your pets abroad

Taking your pets abroad Taking your pets abroad Your guide to diseases encountered abroad Produced by the BVA Animal Welfare Foundation www.bva-awf.org.uk BVA AWF is a registered charity (287118) Prevention is better than cure!

More information

A Survey of Hookworm Infection among Pupils of School Age in Jos-North, Plateau State, Nigeria

A Survey of Hookworm Infection among Pupils of School Age in Jos-North, Plateau State, Nigeria Available online at http://ajol.info/index.php/njbas/index Nigerian Journal of Basic and Applied Science (2010), 18(2): 237-242 ISSN 0794-5698 A Survey of Hookworm Infection among Pupils of School Age

More information

SUMMARY. Introduction. [Afr J Health Sci. 2010; 16:10-14] African Journal of Health Sciences Vol. 17, No. 3-4, July- December

SUMMARY. Introduction. [Afr J Health Sci. 2010; 16:10-14] African Journal of Health Sciences Vol. 17, No. 3-4, July- December The adverse effects of albendazole and praziquantel in mass drug administration by trained schoolteachers Doris W. Njomo¹, *, Noriaki Tomono², Ng ethe Muhoho¹, Yoshinori Mitsui², Kaburi C. Josyline ¹,

More information

VICH Topic GL20 EFFICACY OF ANTHELMINTICS: SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FELINE

VICH Topic GL20 EFFICACY OF ANTHELMINTICS: SPECIFIC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FELINE The European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products Veterinary Medicines and Information Technology CVMP/VICH/545/00-FINAL London, 30 July 2001 VICH Topic GL20 Step 7 EFFICACY OF ANTHELMINTICS:

More information

Key facts for maximum broiler performance. Changing broiler requires a change of approach

Key facts for maximum broiler performance. Changing broiler requires a change of approach Key facts for maximum broiler performance Changing broiler requires a change of approach Good chick quality = UNIFORMITY everywhere in the supply chain Performance 1. Professional breeder house / management

More information

Data were analysed by SPSS, version 10 and the chi-squared test was used to assess statistical differences. P < 0.05 was considered significant.

Data were analysed by SPSS, version 10 and the chi-squared test was used to assess statistical differences. P < 0.05 was considered significant. Toxocara canis is one of the commonest nematodes of the dog and most often this nematode is the cause of toxocariasis (visceral larva migrans) [1]. People become infected by ingestion of eggs from soil,

More information

Hydatid Disease. Overview

Hydatid Disease. Overview Hydatid Disease Overview Hydatid disease in man is caused principally by infection with the larval stage of the dog tapeworm Echinococcus granulosus. It is an important pathogenic zoonotic parasitic infection

More information

Supplementary Appendix

Supplementary Appendix Supplementary Appendix This appendix has been provided by the authors to give readers additional information about their work. Supplement to: Speich B, Ame SM, Ali SM, et al. Oxantel pamoate albendazole

More information

OIE Collaborating Centre for Training in. Integrated Livestock and Wildlife Health and Management, Onderstepoort. Development of the Centre

OIE Collaborating Centre for Training in. Integrated Livestock and Wildlife Health and Management, Onderstepoort. Development of the Centre OIE Collaborating Centre for Training in Integrated Livestock and Wildlife Health and Management, Onderstepoort Development of the Centre Consortium Partner Institutions Proposal - OIE Collaboration Centre

More information

Progress Update: December 2016: Zambia

Progress Update: December 2016: Zambia Sustainable Sanitation and Hygiene For All Programme Progress Update: December 2016: Zambia By December 2016, 364,317 people had gained access to new and improved latrines in the Northern Province since

More information

Farm Newsletter - February 2017

Farm Newsletter - February 2017 Farm Newsletter - February 2017 Lung Worm in Cattle The disease is caused by the worm Dictyocaulus viviparus. Adult worms live in the animal s lungs where they produce eggs which hatch quickly. The first

More information

Effectiveness of Educational Module on knowledge regarding Dengue and its prevention

Effectiveness of Educational Module on knowledge regarding Dengue and its prevention International Journal of Sciences & Applied Research www.ijsar.in Effectiveness of Educational Module on knowledge regarding Dengue and its prevention Rajathi Sakthivel* and Sunitha Priyadharshini Department

More information

Investing in Human Resources in Veterinary Services

Investing in Human Resources in Veterinary Services Investing in Human Resources in Veterinary Services 9 th Conference of Ministers responsible for Animal Resources in Africa Meeting of Experts Abidjan, Côte d Ivoire, 16-17 April 2013 Dr. Etienne Bonbon

More information

Fungal Disease. What is a fungus?

Fungal Disease. What is a fungus? Fungal Disease What is a fungus? A fungus is a living organism. It goes through a complicated life cycle and is able to spread in the environment by producing large numbers of spores that are easily dispersed

More information

Update on the global status of the donation managed by WHO of the medicines for preventive chemotherapy (PC)

Update on the global status of the donation managed by WHO of the medicines for preventive chemotherapy (PC) Update on the global status of the donation managed by WHO of the medicines for preventive chemotherapy (PC) February 9 Department of Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD) World Health Organization,

More information

LOW EFFICACY OF MEBENDAZOLE AGAINST HOOKWORM IN VIETNAM: TWO RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS

LOW EFFICACY OF MEBENDAZOLE AGAINST HOOKWORM IN VIETNAM: TWO RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIALS Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 76(4), 2007, pp. 732 736 Copyright 2007 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene LOW EFFICACY OF MEBENDAZOLE AGAINST HOOKWORM IN VIETNAM: TWO RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED

More information

Albendazole and Mebendazole Administered Alone or in Combination with Ivermectin against Trichuris trichiura: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Albendazole and Mebendazole Administered Alone or in Combination with Ivermectin against Trichuris trichiura: A Randomized Controlled Trial MAJOR ARTICLE and Administered Alone or in Combination with Ivermectin against Trichuris trichiura: A Randomized Controlled Trial Stefanie Knopp, 1,3 Khalfan A. Mohammed, 4 Benjamin Speich, 1,3 Jan Hattendorf,

More information

Building Rapid Interventions to reduce antimicrobial resistance and overprescribing of antibiotics (BRIT)

Building Rapid Interventions to reduce antimicrobial resistance and overprescribing of antibiotics (BRIT) Greater Manchester Connected Health City (GM CHC) Building Rapid Interventions to reduce antimicrobial resistance and overprescribing of antibiotics (BRIT) BRIT Dashboard Manual Users: General Practitioners

More information

Dr. P. P. Doke. M.D., D.N.B., Ph.D., FIPHA. Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Bharati Vidyapeeth Medical College, Pune

Dr. P. P. Doke. M.D., D.N.B., Ph.D., FIPHA. Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Bharati Vidyapeeth Medical College, Pune Dr. P. P. Doke M.D., D.N.B., Ph.D., FIPHA Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Bharati Vidyapeeth Medical College, Pune 1 Anti microbial resistance is now a global geometrically increasing threat

More information

A Conversation with Dr. Steve Solomon and Dr. Jean Patel on Antimicrobial Resistance June 18 th, 2013

A Conversation with Dr. Steve Solomon and Dr. Jean Patel on Antimicrobial Resistance June 18 th, 2013 A Conversation with Dr. Steve Solomon and Dr. Jean Patel on Antimicrobial Resistance June 18 th, 2013 Participant List Dr. Steve Solomon, Director, Office of Antimicrobial Resistance, Division of Healthcare

More information

Evaluating Effect of Albendazole on Trichuris trichiura Infection: A Systematic Review Article

Evaluating Effect of Albendazole on Trichuris trichiura Infection: A Systematic Review Article Iran J Parasitol Tehran University of Medical Sciences Publication http:// tums.ac.ir Open access Journal at http:// ijpa.tums.ac.ir Iranian Society of Parasitology http:// isp.tums.ac.ir Review Article

More information

Infectious Disease Research Linked to Climate Change at CU

Infectious Disease Research Linked to Climate Change at CU Infectious Disease Research Linked to Climate Change at CU Rosemary Rochford, PhD Climate and Health Workshop May 9, 2017 Waterborne diseases: Infectious diseases transmitted through direct contact with

More information

KESMAVET. Disiapkan oleh Prof.Dr.Pratiwi Ts, drh,ms. kesmavet 1-pts

KESMAVET. Disiapkan oleh Prof.Dr.Pratiwi Ts, drh,ms. kesmavet 1-pts KESMAVET Disiapkan oleh Prof.Dr.Pratiwi Ts, drh,ms 1 Generated by Foxit PDF Creator Foxit Software In One World we share: - Air - Water - Land - Food - Pathogens - Toxins 2 ONE MEDICINE 3 ONE PATHOLOGY!!!

More information

Development and improvement of diagnostics to improve use of antibiotics and alternatives to antibiotics

Development and improvement of diagnostics to improve use of antibiotics and alternatives to antibiotics Priority Topic B Diagnostics Development and improvement of diagnostics to improve use of antibiotics and alternatives to antibiotics The overarching goal of this priority topic is to stimulate the design,

More information

DELI VERY OF HEALTH SERVICES TO A SEMI NOMADIC P OP ULATI ON. Dr. James Lemukol Dr Pier Luigi Rossanigo Doctors with Africa Cuamm

DELI VERY OF HEALTH SERVICES TO A SEMI NOMADIC P OP ULATI ON. Dr. James Lemukol Dr Pier Luigi Rossanigo Doctors with Africa Cuamm DELI VERY OF HEALTH SERVICES TO A SEMI NOMADIC P OP ULATI ON Dr. James Lemukol Dr Pier Luigi Rossanigo Doctors with Africa Cuamm EXP ERI ENCE I N KARAMOJA (UGANDA EAST AFRI CA) Doctors w ith Africa Cuamm

More information

GUIDE TO INFECTION CONTROL IN THE HOSPITAL. Antibiotic Resistance

GUIDE TO INFECTION CONTROL IN THE HOSPITAL. Antibiotic Resistance GUIDE TO INFECTION CONTROL IN THE HOSPITAL CHAPTER 4: Antibiotic Resistance Author M.P. Stevens, MD, MPH S. Mehtar, MD R.P. Wenzel, MD, MSc Chapter Editor Michelle Doll, MD, MPH Topic Outline Key Issues

More information

OIE activities on rabies: PVS, vaccine banks and the OIE twinning

OIE activities on rabies: PVS, vaccine banks and the OIE twinning Dr Gardner Murray, Special Adviser World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) OIE activities on rabies: PVS, vaccine banks and the OIE twinning OIE Global Conference on Rabies Control: with the support

More information