| Literature DB >> 29382359 |
Sam H Farrell1, Roy M Anderson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The success of mass drug administration programmes targeting the soil-transmitted helminths and schistosome parasites is in part dependent on compliance to treatment at sequential rounds of mass drug administration (MDA). The impact of MDA is vulnerable to systematic non-compliance, defined as a portion of the eligible population remaining untreated over successive treatment rounds. The impact of systematic non-compliance on helminth transmission dynamics - and thereby on the number of treatment rounds required to interrupt transmission - is dependent on the parasitic helminth being targeted by MDA.Entities:
Keywords: Compliance; Elimination; Mass drug administration; Mathematical modelling; Schistosomiasis; Soil-transmitted helminths; Systematic non-compliance; Transmission interruption
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29382359 PMCID: PMC5791166 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-2670-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1The minimum number of annual treatment rounds required for interruption of transmission. The number of annual MDA treatments required before the transmission breakpoint is crossed, in random compliance and systematic non-compliance settings. Treatment set at 75% coverage in all age groups. The parasite death rate σ has been decreased or increased by 50%, corresponding to a lengthened or shortened parasite lifespan, respectively. In turn each of the other key terms in the transmission intensity (R) equation have been adjusted accordingly in order to assess how each influences the impact of the two different compliance patterns. ∞ elimination is impossible regardless of the number of annual treatment rounds. *after crossing the breakpoint infection remains for a long period (several decades) before eventual elimination