Posts Tagged ‘Tanzania’

New Study Links Schistosomiasis with HIV

May 17th, 2011

By: Linda Diep

A new study asserts that a type of schistosomiasis may predispose women to contracting HIV. Researchers Downs, Mguta, Kaatano et al (2011) conducted a study within the villages of the Lake Victoria region of Tanzania, and found that female urogenital schistosomiasis (FUS) is associated with HIV infection. The study entitled Urogenital Schistosomiasis in Women of Reproductive Age in Tanzania’s Lake Victoria Region builds off previously conducted research in Zimbabwe where women who suffered from genital schistosomiasis were at greater risk for having HIV.

FUS is caused by the Schistosoma haematobium (S.haematobium) worm and affects approximately 45 million women living in sub-Saharan Africa. These worms infect the urine and genital tracts causing inflammation, discomfort, bleeding, and infertility. The Lake Victoria Region found in northwestern Tanzania bordering Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda has among the highest prevalence of  S.haematobium with 50-90% of schoolchildren infected.

The study conducted by Downs et al (2011) aimed to link S.haematobium and HIV infection, specifically among women of reproductive age who are at increased risk for HIV. Key findings and recommendations from the research are as follows:

  • FUS is associated with HIV infection and is most common among young women, especially in the Lake Victoria region of Tanzania
  • Within the affected villages, there are high rates of depression
  • Findings reaffirm suggestions made by the World Health Organization that treating FUS can help reduce HIV transmission among sexually active women in Africa
  • Treatment of FUS should be targeted to women between the ages of 18 and 29 years old, a demographic that is not currently the focus of treatment

Results from this research can lead to a major breakthrough in treatment of FUS, NTDs, and HIV. Identifying associations among diseases helps in developing strategies for treatment to save lives and improve the quality of life of many populations. To do your part in the fight against NTDs, please visit the Global Network website for ways to contribute.

Myths vs. Reality: Trachoma in Tanzania

October 28th, 2010

Reprinted with permission from Seed to Sight.

A public health intern shares her experience working with Helen Keller International.

By: Hannah Godlove

Hannah Godlove - Tanzania Intern

The first time I saw a trichiasis surgery to correct blinding trachoma I almost passed out. It was pretty embarrassing to have someone sit me down and bring me a Fanta for my blood sugar after seeing me wobble. It was even worse when that someone was waiting for her own surgery.

I have been working with Helen Keller International’s trachoma control program in Tanzania for almost three months. A little background: trachoma is a blinding disease that often infects children. Without treatment, the eyelid inverts, the eyelashes begin to scratch the cornea, and the patient eventually goes blind. To treat trachoma and prevent blindness, patients can either take the drug azythromycin or, in the later stage of the disease, they can undergo a fairly simple surgical procedure. The outpatient procedure prevents the eyelid from inverting.

In Tanzania, nearly one third of the population is at risk of contracting trachoma and the surgical backlog in the Mtwara and Lindi regions of Tanzania alone is estimated to be 67,500 people. Living in Mtwara, I see tons of older people walking around blinded by this wretched disease.

Click here to read the full post.

Reading List 6/22/2010

June 22nd, 2010

Interesting articles today on our reading list! Today we’re reading about elephantiasis control in Tanzania, the establishment of 25 new public health laboratories in East Africa thanks to funding from the World Bank, the challenge that nomadic groups in southern Sudan pose in eliminating guinea worm within the region, and leishmaniasis among U.S. soldiers in Baghdad. Enjoy!

Impact of programme to control elephantiasis levels off, Paul Chinnock , TropIKA
EAC Health Sector Gets U.S.$64 Million Boost from World Bank, David Muwanga, All Africa
Nomadic Groups Pose Challenge to Eliminate Guinea Worm – Southern Sudan, The Carter Center
Sand flies infect U.S. forces leaving them with ‘Baghdad Boil’, Eric Athas, The Washington Post

Community Support Key to Eliminating River Blindness in Tanzania

September 18th, 2009

Earlier this week, the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer ran a segment on Tanzania’s efforts to control onchocerciasis (river blindness), by engaging community drug distributors to deliver treatments to some of the country’s most remote areas. In Tanzania, an estimated 4 million people at risk for the infection. Worldwide, more than 37 million people are infected with the disease, which causes blindness, skin lesion, eye diseases, and severe itching.

This segment features the work of the African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) and reveals how bicycles are a major part of breaking the cycle of disease for the country’s vulnerable citizens.