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      Prevalence of and Risk Factors for Trachoma in Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region, Ethiopia: Results of 40 Population-Based Prevalence Surveys Carried Out with the Global Trachoma Mapping Project

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          ABSTRACT

          Purpose : We sought to estimate the prevalence of trachoma at sufficiently fine resolution to allow elimination interventions to begin, where required, in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR) of Ethiopia.

          Methods : We carried out cross-sectional population-based surveys in 14 rural zones. A 2-stage cluster randomized sampling technique was used. A total of 40 evaluation units (EUs) covering 110 districts (“woredas”) were surveyed from February 2013 to May 2014 as part of the Global Trachoma Mapping Project (GTMP), using the standardized GTMP training package and methodology.

          Results : A total of 30,187 households were visited in 1047 kebeles (clusters). A total of 131,926 people were enumerated, with 121,397 (92.0%) consenting to examination. Of these, 65,903 (54.3%) were female. In 38 EUs (108 woredas), TF prevalence was above the 10% threshold at which the World Health Organization recommends mass drug administration with azithromycin annually for at least 3 years. The region-level age- and sex-adjusted trichiasis prevalence was 1.5%, with the highest prevalence of 6.1% found in Cheha woreda in Gurage zone. The region-level age-adjusted TF prevalence was 25.9%. The highest TF prevalence found was 48.5% in Amaro and Burji woredas. In children aged 1–9 years, TF was associated with being a younger child, living at an altitude <2500m, living in an area where the annual mean temperature was >15°C, and the use of open defecation by household members.

          Conclusion : Active trachoma and trichiasis are significant public health problems in SNNPR, requiring full implementation of the SAFE strategy (surgery, antibiotics, facial cleanliness, and environmental improvement).

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          Most cited references16

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          A simple system for the assessment of trachoma and its complications.

          A simple grading system for trachoma, based on the presence or absence of five selected "key" signs, has been developed. The method was tested in the field and showed good observer agreement, the most critical point being the identification of severe cases of the disease. It is expected that the system will facilitate the assessment of trachoma and its complications by non-specialist health personnel working at the community level.
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            The Global Trachoma Mapping Project: Methodology of a 34-Country Population-Based Study

            ABSTRACT Purpose: To complete the baseline trachoma map worldwide by conducting population-based surveys in an estimated 1238 suspected endemic districts of 34 countries. Methods: A series of national and sub-national projects owned, managed and staffed by ministries of health, conduct house-to-house cluster random sample surveys in evaluation units, which generally correspond to “health district” size: populations of 100,000–250,000 people. In each evaluation unit, we invite all residents aged 1 year and older from h households in each of c clusters to be examined for clinical signs of trachoma, where h is the number of households that can be seen by 1 team in 1 day, and the product h × c is calculated to facilitate recruitment of 1019 children aged 1–9 years. In addition to individual-level demographic and clinical data, household-level water, sanitation and hygiene data are entered into the purpose-built LINKS application on Android smartphones, transmitted to the Cloud, and cleaned, analyzed and ministry-of-health-approved via a secure web-based portal. The main outcome measures are the evaluation unit-level prevalence of follicular trachoma in children aged 1–9 years, prevalence of trachomatous trichiasis in adults aged 15 + years, percentage of households using safe methods for disposal of human feces, and percentage of households with proximate access to water for personal hygiene purposes. Results: In the first year of fieldwork, 347 field teams commenced work in 21 projects in 7 countries. Conclusion: With an approach that is innovative in design and scale, we aim to complete baseline mapping of trachoma throughout the world in 2015.
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              Role of flies and provision of latrines in trachoma control: cluster-randomised controlled trial.

              Eye-seeking flies have received much attention as possible trachoma vectors, but this remains unproved. We aimed to assess the role of eye-seeking flies as vectors of trachoma and to test provision of simple pit latrines, without additional health education, as a sustainable method of fly control. In a community-based, cluster-randomised controlled trial, we recruited seven sets of three village clusters and randomly assigned them to either an intervention group that received regular insecticide spraying or provision of pit latrines (without additional health education) to each household, or to a control group with no intervention. Our primary outcomes were fly-eye contact and prevalence of active trachoma. Frequency of child fly-eye contact was monitored fortnightly. Whole communities were screened for clinical signs of trachoma at baseline and after 6 months. Analysis was per protocol. Of 7080 people recruited, 6087 (86%) were screened at follow-up. Baseline community prevalence of active trachoma was 6%. The number of Musca sorbens flies caught from children's eyes was reduced by 88% (95% CI 64-100; p<0.0001) by insecticide spraying and by 30% (7-52; p=0.04) by latrine provision by comparison with controls. Analysis of age-standardised trachoma prevalence rates at the cluster level (n=14) showed that spraying was associated with a mean reduction in trachoma prevalence of 56% (19-93; p=0.01) and 30% with latrines (-81 to 22; p=0.210) by comparison with the mean rate change in the controls. Fly control with insecticide is effective at reducing the number of flies caught from children's eyes and is associated with substantially lower trachoma prevalence compared with controls. Such a finding is consistent with flies being important vectors of trachoma. Since latrine provision without health education was associated with a significant reduction in fly-eye contact by M sorbens, studies of their effect when combined with other trachoma control measures are warranted.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: for the Global Trachoma Mapping Project
                Journal
                Ophthalmic Epidemiol
                Ophthalmic Epidemiol
                IOPE
                iope20
                Ophthalmic Epidemiology
                Taylor & Francis
                0928-6586
                1744-5086
                2016
                05 December 2016
                : 23
                : sup1 , Trachoma Mapping
                : 84-93
                Affiliations
                [ a ] ORBIS International , Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
                [ b ] Clinical Research Department, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine , London, UK
                [ c ] Sightsavers, Haywards Heath , UK
                [ d ] SNNPR Regional Health Bureau , Awassa, Ethiopia
                [ e ] Michael Dejene Public Health Consultancy Services , Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
                [ f ] Task Force for Global Health , Decatur, GA, USA
                [ g ] The Fred Hollows Foundation Ethiopia , Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
                [ h ] Berhan Public Health and Eye Care Consultancy , Addis Adaba, Ethiopia
                [ i ] Blantyre Institute for Community Ophthalmology , Blantyre, Malawi
                [ j ] Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Addis Ababa University , Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
                [ k ] Consultant Ophthalmologist
                Author notes
                CONTACT Colin Macleod colin.macleod@ 123456lshtm.ac.uk Clinical Research Department, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine , London, UK.
                [†]

                The authors consider these individuals to be joint first-authors.

                [*]

                See Appendix

                Color versions of one or more of the figures in the article can be found online at www.tandfonline.com/iope.

                Article
                1247876
                10.1080/09286586.2016.1247876
                5706981
                27918229
                b5cc1ea1-c02b-4828-87cd-ad770506a856
                Published with license by Taylor & Francis

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 04 January 2016
                : 24 September 2016
                : 07 September 2016
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 5, References: 23, Pages: 10
                Funding
                Funded by: 10.13039/501100000278 Department for International Development
                Funded by: 10.13039/100000200 United States Agency for International Development
                Funded by: 10.13039/100004440 Wellcome Trust
                Award ID: 098521
                This study was principally funded by the Global Trachoma Mapping Project (GTMP) grant from the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (ARIES: 203145) to Sightsavers, which led a consortium of non-governmental organizations and academic institutions to support ministries of health to complete baseline trachoma mapping worldwide. The GTMP was also funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through the ENVISION project implemented by RTI International under cooperative agreement number AID-OAA-A-11-00048, and the END in Asia project implemented by FHI360 under cooperative agreement number OAA-A-10-00051. A committee established in March 2012 to examine issues surrounding completion of global trachoma mapping was initially funded by a grant from Pfizer to the International Trachoma Initiative. AWS was a Wellcome Trust Intermediate Clinical Fellow (098521) at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. None of the funders had any role in project design, in project implementation or analysis or interpretation of data, in the decisions on where, how or when to publish in the peer-reviewed press, or in preparation of the manuscript.
                Categories
                Article
                Original Articles

                Ophthalmology & Optometry
                ethiopia,global trachoma mapping project,prevalence,snnpr,trachoma,trichiasis

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