| Literature DB >> 24401567 |
Santigie Sesay, Jusufu Paye, Mohamed S Bah, Florence Max McCarthy, Abdulai Conteh, Mustapha Sonnie, Mary H Hodges1, Yaobi Zhang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosoma mansoni was moderately-highly endemic in the northeast of Sierra Leone. The national neglected tropical disease control program started mass drug administration (MDA) with praziquantel (PZQ) in six districts in 2009 targeting primary school children only. The effort was scaled-up to seven districts in 2010 targeting school aged children (SAC) and at-risk adults. A cross-sectional sentinel site survey was conducted in 2012 after three rounds of MDA to evaluate the impact of the national program.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24401567 PMCID: PMC3895768 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-7-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Sentinel site locations and prevalence in Sierra Leone. Numbers in blue represent the prevalence value at the baseline (the former) and after 3 rounds of MDA (the latter) for each sentinel site.
Sierra Leone schistosomiasis treatment numbers and coverage 2009-11
| Bo | - | - | - | 278,547 | 223,096 | 80.1 | 183,192 | 151,887 | 82.9 | 660 | 500 | 75.8 |
| (121,467) | (110,300) | (90.8) | (75,679) | (63,545) | (84.0) | (113,500) | (98,196) | (87.0) | (360) | (288) | (80.0) | |
| Bombali | N/A | N/A | N/A | 135,705 | 107,253 | 79.0 | 21,810 | 17,921 | 82.2 | 720 | 625 | 86.8 |
| (4,562) | (3,939) | (86.3) | (32,394) | (29,756) | (92.0) | (360) | (314) | (87.2) | ||||
| Kailahun | - | - | - | 417,899 | 336,014 | 80.4 | 438,952 | 364,249 | 83.3 | 1,414 | 1,138 | 80.5 |
| (86,631) | (84,118) | (97.1) | (97,556) | (84,030) | (86.1) | (97,556) | (84,444) | (87.0) | (707) | (599) | (84.7) | |
| Kenema | - | - | - | 532,807 | 416,974 | 78.3 | 530,803 | 423,864 | 79.9 | 1,693 | 1,574 | 93.0 |
| (156,496) | (151,203) | (96.6) | (100,439) | (84,868) | (84.5) | (102,443) | (89,764) | (88.0) | (754) | (671) | (89.0) | |
| Koinadugu | - | - | - | 387,289 | 261,416 | 67.5 | 341,987 | 274,206 | 80.2 | 1,620 | 1,306 | 80.6 |
| (62,278) | (55,725) | (89.5) | (59,121) | (50,631) | (85.6) | (72,521) | (50,631) | (70.0) | (720) | (692) | (96.1) | |
| Kono | - | - | - | 422,204 | 326,535 | 77.3 | 495,787 | 405,123 | 81.7 | 1,438 | 1,261 | 87.7 |
| (99,553) | (97,279) | (97.7) | (84,468) | (72,917) | (86.3) | (73,362) | (68,369) | (93.0) | (720) | (648) | (90.0) | |
| Tonkolili | - | - | - | 201,088 | 160,095 | 79.6 | 168,383 | 143,787 | 85.4 | 960 | 728 | 75.8 |
| (67,276) | (64,355) | (95.7) | (50,122) | (43,282) | (86.4) | (135,069) | (118,943) | (86.0) | (480) | (389) | (81.0) | |
Note: Figures for SAC are shown in brackets.
prevalence at sentinel sites in 2009 and 2012 in Sierra Leone
| 770 | 49.7 (46.2 - 53.3) | 1290 | 16.3 (14.4 - 18.4) | −67.2 | |
| | | | | | |
| Bo | 119 | 25.2 (18.3 - 33.7) | 198 | 0.5 (0.1 - 2.8) | −98.0 |
| Bombali | 142 | 27.5 (20.8 - 35.3) | 239 | 17.6 (13.3 - 22.9) | −36.0 |
| Kailahun | 90 | 60.0 (49.7 - 69.5) | 149 | 16.8 (11.6 - 23.6) | −72.0 |
| Kenema | 119 | 60.5 (51.5 - 68.8) | 199 | 17.1 (12.5 - 22.9) | −71.7 |
| Koinadugu | 60 | 83.3 (72.0 - 90.7) | 100 | 36.0 (27.3 -45.8) | −56.8 |
| Kono | 60 | 65.0 (52.4 - 75.8) | 101 | 20.8 (14.0 - 29.7) | −68.0 |
| Tonkolili | 180 | 35.0 (28.4 - 42.2) | 304 | 12.2 (9.0 - 16.3) | −65.1 |
| | | | | ||
| Low | 118 | 4.1 (1.3 - 10.7) | 201 | 8.7 (4.7 - 14.3)* | 112.2 |
| Moderate | 294 | 24.7 (19.8 - 30.0) | 498 | 7.4 (5.3 - 10.1) | −70.0 |
| High | 358 | 74.5 (70.1 - 78.4) | 591 | 23.6 (20.6 - 26.9) | −68.3 |
| | | | | | |
| Boys | 373 | 52.8 (47.7 - 57.8) | 645 | 17.0 (14.2 - 20.0) | −67.8 |
| Girls | 396 | 46.7 (41.7 - 51.5) | 644 | 15.7 (13.1 - 18.7) | −66.4 |
*Change in prevalence in this group is not statistically significant (p = 0.109).
intensity of infection at sentinel sites in 2009 and 2012 in Sierra Leone
| 770 | 134.53 (93.51 - 175.55) | 1290 | 18.98 (11.46 - 26.50) | −85.9 | |
| | | | | | |
| Bo | 119 | 35.09 (17.59 - 52.59) | 198 | 0.12 (0–0.36) | −99.7 |
| Bombali | 142 | 48.85 (27.67 - 70.02) | 239 | 18.68 (5.95 - 31.41) | −61.8 |
| Kailahun | 90 | 194.93 (116.14 - 273.73) | 149 | 19.33 (8.62 - 30.03) | −90.1 |
| Kenema | 119 | 191.60 (132.61 - 250.58) | 199 | 25.69 (11.99 - 39.39) | −86.6 |
| Koinadugu | 60 | 250.80 (180.44 - 321.16) | 100 | 42.72 (24.86 - 60.58) | −83.0 |
| Kono | 60 | 159.60 (87.16 - 232.04) | 101 | 10.22 (5.66 - 14.78) | −93.6 |
| Tonkolili | 180 | 91.33 (57.43 - 125.24) | 304 | 24.87 (14.94 - 34.80) | −72.8 |
| | | | | ||
| Low | 118 | 9.25 (0–18.56) | 201 | 15.50 (0–34.84)* | 67.6 |
| Moderate | 294 | 29.81 (19.14 - 40.48) | 498 | 8.78 (2.79 - 14.76) | −70.5 |
| High | 358 | 226.01 (153.79 - 298.23) | 591 | 26.41 (13.18 - 39.64) | −88.3 |
| | | | | | |
| Boys | 373 | 133.96 (80.79 - 187.13) | 645 | 19.30 (9.30 - 29.30) | −85.6 |
| Girls | 396 | 135.00 (72.98 - 197.02) | 644 | 18.69 (7.45 - 29.94) | −86.2 |
*Change in intensity of infection in this group is not statistically significant (p = 0.26).
Figure 2Proportion (%) of different degrees of intensity of infection in school age children in 2009 and in 2012 in Sierra Leone. Error bars represent the 95% confidence intervals.