Created: Jan 25, 2007
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“Rapid-Impact Interventions”: How a Policy of Integrated Control for Africa's Neglected Tropical Diseases Could Benefit the Poor

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Type: Research Paper/Report or Journal Article
Website: http://medicine.plosjournals.o...
Author: David H. Molyneux, Peter J. Hotez*, Alan Fenwick
Publisher: PLOS Journal of Medicine
Date published: Tue, Oct 11, 2005
Keywords: schistosomiasis, trypanosomiasis, filariasis

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Over the past two decades there have been significant achievements in the control of a handful of important human tropical infections [1]. These achievements include the substantive reductions in the prevalence and incidence of the so-called neglected diseases such as lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, guinea worm, leprosy, and trachoma.


Each of these neglected diseases is a poverty-promoting and often stigmatizing condition occurring primarily in rural areas of low-income countries (Box 2) [3]. They are ancient afflictions, described in the Bible and other ancient texts, which have burdened humanity for millennia [3]. But now, as a result of aggressive regional vertical interventions, there is a possibility that some neglected tropical infections could be eventually controlled to the point of elimination in some areas of endemicity [2–8]. In the case of guinea worm infection, disease eradication might also soon be possible [9].
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