| Literature DB >> 29385131 |
Julianne A Ivy1, Charles H King1,2, Joseph A Cook3, Daniel G Colley2.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29385131 PMCID: PMC5791936 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Sketch map of St. Lucia Island, indicating valleys selected for intervention assignments in the 1965–1981 comparison trial of S. mansoni control strategies.
Shaded areas indicate the separate valley locations where the different study interventions were tested during the course of the St. Lucia Project. Labels indicate the names of the selected valleys and which interventions were performed at each location. Map created with QGIS v.2.18.10 software (http://www.qgis.org) using a country base map provided by the GADM database of Global Administrative Areas (http://www.gadm.org).
Comparison of requirements and effects of control strategies tested in the St. Lucia Project (adapted from reference [1]).
| Snail control | Chemotherapy | Clean water | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transmission patterns | Case detection / prevalence surveys | Location of clean water sources | |
| Public health workers | Technicians, | Engineers, | |
| + + + | + + | + + + + | |
| + + | + | + + | |
| + | + + + + | + + + + | |
| Chemicals | Drugs, | Pipes, fitting, pumps, tanks, electricity, etc. | |
| Slow | Rapid | Slow | |
| All those using treated water bodies | Those treated; untreated may become less exposed to infection | Those using water supplies | |
| Minimal | Patients cured, | Improved overall health, | |
| Little impact | Significant impact (i.e. undermined by immigration) | Little impact |
* Key: + least; + + + + most
Fig 2Comparison of the impact of individual control measures implemented during the St. Lucia study.
The effects of provision of water, of focal and area-wide snail control via mollusciciding, and of targeted chemotherapy in reducing S. mansoni incidence per annum, prevalence, and mean infection intensity (for those with egg-positive stools). Relative reductions over the initial 3–5 year course of each intervention are shown (as percentages) indicated by the horizontal bars. Data from [1, pp. 270–271].