GENEVA,Switzerland, April 20 2017,
-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- With a drastic reduction in neglected
tropical diseases (NTDs) during the past five years, the World Health
Organization (WHO), donors, non-governmental organizations and
government representatives of endemic countries are meeting in Geneva,
Switzerland to build on the gains that have been made and reaffirm their
commitment to the fight against Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs).
Since
the London Declaration five years ago, which crystallized the
international commitment to fight against 10 NTDs, tremendous progress
has been made in reducing the burden of these diseases. Globally, nearly
a billion people received treatment for at least one NTD in 2015, 36%
more than just four years before. The number of people in need of NTD
treatments decreased from 2 billion in 2010 to 1.6 billion in 2015. Two
highly effective approaches, mass drug administration (MDA) and
intensified disease management (IDM), have made this possible.
In
the African Region which alone bears 40% of the population suffering
from NTDs, great strides have been made in the past years. Togo has just
eliminated Lymphatic Filariasis as a public health problem. Ethiopia
has made significant strides in the fight against Trachoma by setting
targets in its national health plan and increasing domestic funding to 3
million US dollars as at 2016. The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
is now funding 25% of NTD programs, up from 0% in 2011.
In
collaboration with partners, WHO launched the Expanded Special Project
for Elimination of NTDs (ESPEN) less than a year ago, to significantly
cut the burden of the five PC-NTDs in Africa by sharing best practices,
coordinating activities and offering technical guidance.
Conscious
that with 47 African countries endemic to at least one of the ten
London Declaration NTDs, it is critical to have a complete map of the
disease burden in order to accelerate the control and elimination of
NTDs in the African Region. Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, the WHO Regional
Director for Africa, announced this week the launch of the AFRO NTD
Portal. Through this portal, Health Ministries and stakeholders can
share data to support public health action. "As scaling up mass drug
administration for the over 600 million people who need preventive
chemotherapy remains one of the biggest challenges in the region, this
NTD portal illustrates WHO AFRO's bold ambitious to take focused and
unwavering action" said Dr. Moeti.
An intensive and large scale
mapping exercise to accurately record the prevalence of NTDs has been
carried out as 37 African countries are co-endemic for at least five of
these diseases. With support from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation, the project aimed to complete the mapping of four diseases -
Lymphatic Filariasis, Onchocerciasis, Soil-Transmitted Helminths and
Schistosomiasis. This project known as Shrinking the Map, involved (i)
field surveys, (ii) developing high-quality maps and relevant profiles
on disease and programme performance, and (iii) making the maps
available to the public to support programmatic decision making.
Furthermore,
in an effort to accurately map the prevalence of trachoma, the world's
leading infectious cause of blindness, the Global Trachoma Mapping
Project (GTMP), supported by DFID and USAID has carried out the largest
trachoma disease mapping in history. The mapping of Onchocerciasis,
however, remains an urgent need for the African region.
"Neglected
Tropical Diseases (NTD) programmes harness diverse partnerships to
drive impact - including across sectors, and countries. With communities
and entire nations struggling under the burden of these diseases,
increased financial support, stronger political commitment and better
tools to prevent, diagnose and treat the diseases are vital to defeat
NTDs. The window of opportunity to achieve the 2020 targets is right in
front of us, and we cannot let it close. The success so far shows what
can be done if we work together," said Dr Matshidiso Moeti.
Neglected
Tropical Diseases are preventable infectious diseases that kill 534,000
people annually. Worldwide, over 1 billion people, including 500
million children, remain at risk. Impoverished communities are
disproportionally targeted; perpetuating a cycle of marginalization and
stunted economic growth. Some of the most rampant NTDs include Lymphatic
Filariasis, Onchocerciasis, Schistosomiasis, Soil-Transmitted
Helminthiasis and Trachoma. However, these five diseases can all be
treated with Preventative Chemotherapy (PC). The treatment costs less
than $1 per person, and the implementation of mass drug administration
has cured millions thus far.
The Expanded Special Project for
Elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases (ESPEN) provides African
countries with technical assistance to accelerate the control and
elimination of the five Neglected Tropical Diseases amenable to
Preventive Chemotherapy (PC-NTDs): Onchocerciasis, Lymphatic Filariasis,
Schistosomiasis, Soil Transmitted Helminthiasis and Trachoma. ESPEN is a
five-year project nested within the World Health Organization's
Regional Office for Africa (WHO AFRO) and is inspired by the World
Health Organization's 2020 Roadmap on NTDs.
Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of World Health Organization's Regional Office for Africa.
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