| Literature DB >> 25356978 |
Hermann Feldmeier1, Jorg Heukelbach2, Uade Samuel Ugbomoiko3, Elizabeth Sentongo4, Pamela Mbabazi5, Georg von Samson-Himmelstjerna6, Ingela Krantz7.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25356978 PMCID: PMC4214674 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003133
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Figure 1Life cycle of T. penetrans in a tropical environment.
The human, domestic, and sylvatic cycles are linked but without close overlap.
Figure 2Life cycle of T. penetrans in a tropical environment.
The human, domestic, and sylvatic cycles overlap closely.
Major goals and needs for achievements and control of tungiasis.
| Goals | Needs |
| 1. Assess the burden of disease and define regions and population groups that will most benefit from effective control measures | • Perform systematic prevalence and morbidity studies in all countries in which tungiasis occurs or is supposed to occur |
| • Establish geographical distribution of tungiasis in humans and animals in the Americas and in sub-Saharan Africa | |
| 2. Understand the role which animal reservoirs play and describe characteristics of local transmission dynamics (where, when and why people get infected) | • Determine the animal reservoir in different settings |
| • Design and implement methods of cooperation between the academic, the public health, and the veterinary sectors | |
| • Determine the duration of the transmission season(s) according to the climate characteristics | |
| 3. Assess the economic and societal impact of tungiasis in impoverished settings | • Establish animal models of tungiasis to evaluate the impact on livestock productivity |
| • Determine the impact tungiasis in humans and animals has on household economics, performance in school, and access to local health and administrative infrastructure | |
| • Quantify life quality impairment in patients with tungiasis | |
| 4. Eliminate health risks associated with the neglect of acute and chronic tungiasis-associated morbidity and the treatment with inappropriate instruments | • Identify pathogens transmitted through inappropriate treatment with sharp instruments |
| • Provide simple, safe, effective, and sustainable means for self-treatment of tungiasis | |
| • Screen locally available plants for repellent activity against sand fleas | |
| • Prevent tungiasis through elimination of breeding sites and animal reservoirs | |
| 5. Raise awareness and create intersectional cooperation based on “One Health” principles | • Perform information, education, and communication campaigns—work on eliminating the stigmatization associated with tungiasis (“It is nothing to be ashamed about!”) |
| • Create a community-led demand for community-based interventions: let local communities speak for themselves | |
| • Take advantage of flea control approaches in use for domestic animals | |
| • Identify stakeholders on all levels from global to regional and from national to local community |
Figure 3Shoe of an adolescent from rural Kenya after 6 months of use.