Reducing the Burden of Preventable Diseases Among the Poor: Onchocerciasis and Filariasis
The Organization participates actively in the regional initiative to eliminate onchocerciasis, or river blindness, from the Americas, where the six remaining endemic countries-Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, and Venezuela-have dramatically reduced the at-risk population. PAHO has cosponsored regional conferences on elimination of the disease, provided technical support to national programs, and developed standardized epidemiological evaluations. Those evaluations indicate that the at-risk population shrank from 4,700,000 in 1995 to 660,000 in 1999.
Although the World Health Organization has called for the
global elimination of lymphatic filariasis
by 2020, the Region of the Americas expects
to reach that goal much sooner. In the seven
endemic countries-Brazil, Costa Rica, Dominican
Republic, Guyana, Haiti, Suriname, and Trinidad
and Tobago-the infection is focalized and
the number of cases small. Elimination will
entail mass multi-drug therapy of the at-risk
population, and GlaxoSmithKline is donating
one of the drugs, albendazole, for as long
as the disease persists. To ensure success
of the regional program, the Organization
is orchestrating partnerships with the endemic
countries' ministries of health, the private
sector, including the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, cdc, other international and
bilateral agencies, and nongovernmental
organizations. PAHO has advocated the designation
of national program managers in all seven
countries, four of which have also set up
national task forces. With PAHO's support,
the countries are using new diagnostic tools-antigen
detection cards-to map and measure the magnitude
of the problem. Those tools are enabling
Guyana, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic
to identify target populations and, perhaps,
to show that Brazil, Costa Rica, Suriname,
and Trinidad and Tobago may not require
an elimination program and may only have
to deal with residual morbidity.
This article originally appeared in the
Preventing and Controlling Diseases chapter of
"Charting a Future for Health in the Americas:
Quadrennial Report of the Director—Centennial Edition"
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