TY - JOUR KW - Young Adult KW - Trichiasis KW - Trachoma KW - Prevalence KW - Neglected Diseases KW - Male KW - Malawi KW - Infant KW - Humans KW - Health Surveys KW - Global health KW - Female KW - Endemic Diseases KW - Cross-Sectional Studies KW - Cluster Analysis KW - Child, Preschool KW - Child KW - Adult KW - Adolescent AU - Kalua K AU - Phiri M AU - Kumwenda I AU - Masika M AU - Pavluck A AU - Willis R AU - Mpyet C AU - Lewallen S AU - Courtright P AU - Solomon A AU - Global Trachoma Mapping Project AB -
PURPOSE: To determine the prevalence of trachoma in all suspected endemic districts in Malawi.
METHODS: A population-based survey conducted in 16 evaluation units from 12 suspected endemic districts in Malawi (population 6,390,517), using the standardized Global Trachoma Mapping Project (GTMP) protocol. A 2-stage cluster-random sampling design selected 30 households from each of 30 clusters per evaluation unit; all residents aged 1 year and older in selected households were examined for evidence of follicular trachoma (TF), intense trachomatous inflammation (TI), and trachomatous trichiasis (TT).
RESULTS: Four of the 16 evaluation units were found to be endemic for trachoma, with a prevalence range of 10.0-13.5% for TF and 0.2-0.6% for TT. Nine evaluation units had a TF prevalence between 5.0% and 9.9% while three evaluation units had a TF prevalence <5.0%.
CONCLUSION: The prevalence rates of active trachoma in Malawi were not uniform among suspected endemic evaluation units, with rates higher than the World Health Organization (WHO) threshold for implementation of community-based control measures (TF ≥ 10.0%) in only 4 of the 16 evaluation units. Trachoma remains a disease of public health importance in some parts of Malawi and adjoining (unmapped) districts should be prioritized for mapping. According to the survey, an additional 3,169,362 people require intervention to reduce active disease and 1557 trichiasis surgeries are needed to reduce the prevalence of TT below WHO recommended thresholds.
BT - Ophthalmic epidemiology C1 -http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26158575?dopt=Abstract
DO - 10.3109/09286586.2015.1035793 IS - 3 J2 - Ophthalmic Epidemiol LA - eng N2 -PURPOSE: To determine the prevalence of trachoma in all suspected endemic districts in Malawi.
METHODS: A population-based survey conducted in 16 evaluation units from 12 suspected endemic districts in Malawi (population 6,390,517), using the standardized Global Trachoma Mapping Project (GTMP) protocol. A 2-stage cluster-random sampling design selected 30 households from each of 30 clusters per evaluation unit; all residents aged 1 year and older in selected households were examined for evidence of follicular trachoma (TF), intense trachomatous inflammation (TI), and trachomatous trichiasis (TT).
RESULTS: Four of the 16 evaluation units were found to be endemic for trachoma, with a prevalence range of 10.0-13.5% for TF and 0.2-0.6% for TT. Nine evaluation units had a TF prevalence between 5.0% and 9.9% while three evaluation units had a TF prevalence <5.0%.
CONCLUSION: The prevalence rates of active trachoma in Malawi were not uniform among suspected endemic evaluation units, with rates higher than the World Health Organization (WHO) threshold for implementation of community-based control measures (TF ≥ 10.0%) in only 4 of the 16 evaluation units. Trachoma remains a disease of public health importance in some parts of Malawi and adjoining (unmapped) districts should be prioritized for mapping. According to the survey, an additional 3,169,362 people require intervention to reduce active disease and 1557 trichiasis surgeries are needed to reduce the prevalence of TT below WHO recommended thresholds.
PY - 2015 SP - 176 EP - 83 T2 - Ophthalmic epidemiology TI - Baseline trachoma mapping in Malawi with the global trachoma mapping project (GTMP). UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4673584/pdf/iope-22-176.pdf VL - 22 SN - 1744-5086 ER -