| Literature DB >> 35649048 |
Rita de Cássia Moreira de Souza1, David E Gorla2, Marcia Chame3, Nicolas Jaramillo4, Carlota Monroy5, Lileia Diotaiuti1.
Abstract
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is a plan of action for people, planet and prosperity. Thousands of years and centuries of colonisation have passed the precarious housing conditions, food insecurity, lack of sanitation, the limitation of surveillance, health care programs and climate change. Chagas disease continues to be a public health problem. The control programs have been successful in many countries in reducing transmission by T. cruzi; but the results have been variable. WHO makes recommendations for prevention and control with the aim of eliminating Chagas disease as a public health problem. Climate change, deforestation, migration, urbanisation, sylvatic vectors and oral transmission require integrating the economic, social, and environmental dimensions of sustainable development, as well as the links within and between objectives and sectors. While the environment scenarios change around the world, native vector species pose a significant public health threat. The man-made atmosphere change is related to the increase of triatomines' dispersal range, or an increase of the mobility of the vectors from their sylvatic environment to man-made constructions, or humans getting into sylvatic scenarios, leading to an increase of Chagas disease infection. Innovations with the communities and collaborations among municipalities, International cooperation agencies, local governmental agencies, academic partners, developmental agencies, or environmental institutions may present promising solutions, but sustained partnerships, long-term commitment, and strong regional leadership are required. A new world has just opened up for the renewal of surveillance practices, but the lessons learned in the past should be the basis for solutions in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35649048 PMCID: PMC9150778 DOI: 10.1590/0074-02760200479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ISSN: 0074-0276 Impact factor: 2.747
Impact of sustainable development goals (SDGs) in Chagas disease
| SDGs can affect Chagas disease? | How | Why | References | |
| SDG 1 | End poverty in all its forms everywhere | ↑ | Chagas disease mostly affects poor and unassisted people. According WHO “Chagas disease is a proxy for poverty and disadvantage: it affects populations with low visibility and little political voice, causes stigma and discrimination, is relatively neglected by researchers, and has a considerable impact on morbidity and mortality”. |
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| SDG 2 | End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture | ↑ | Oral transmission of |
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| SDG 3 | Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages | ↑ | Chagas disease significantly affects the countries of South America where premature death leads to the loss of thousands of working days and a billion dollar impact on productivity. Health care costs reach more than half a billion a year and the migration of infected people to non-endemic areas, such as Europe, requires specific resources for this disease in these areas. Chagas’ disease is highly prevalent in rural areas. A study in Brazil from 2000 to 2010, with 54,236 patients, indicates greater involvement and mortality rate among men. Most patients were over 60 years old (Nóbrega et al.). The improvement of housing in some areas and lower fertility may be one of the causes of the aging of the disease, which translates into low infection among young people and an increase in the cause of death in the elderly in these areas. |
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| SDG 4 | Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all | ↑ | Little or incorrect information is one of the fundamental aspects that compromise health promotion and actions for the prevention and control of zoonoses. In the case of Chagas’ disease, the knowledge of the vector species, their behavior, habitat and form of transmission of |
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| SDG 5 | Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls | ↑ | Chagas disease can be a congenital disease. The WHO points out that the elimination of congenital transmission depends on early diagnosis in infected pregnant women, newborns and immediate treatment. As the effectiveness of antiparasitic treatment is more frequent, faster and with fewer adverse reactions in girls under 19 years of age, it is important to promote the diagnosis before pregnancy, especially in non-endemic areas. The adoption of positive attitudes is one of the objectives of intervention programs for Chagas’ diseases, which must adopt different communication strategies between the sexes. Those that increase women’s knowledge about prevention and control of Chagas’ disease can contribute to increase the levels of adoption of good practices. For men, on the other hand, a strategy must involve practical and collaborative activities, differences that must be used in planning programs. |
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| SDG 6 | Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all | → | Good practices in food preparation, transportation, storage and consumptiom are recommended as a supporting actions to prevent the risk of oral |
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| SDG 7 | Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all | → | Access to energy allows the maintenance of food and production of perishables, promotes comfort, quality of life and reduces manual labor, conditions that benefit extractive communities and rural producers in areas at risk of Chagas disease. Energy also promotes access to information through television and the internet that contribute to health education. On the other hand, home and street lighting can be an attraction factor for Chagas disease vectors and could increase the contact rates between vectors, humans and domestic animals. |
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| SDG 8 | Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all | ↑ | Food production, extractivism and changes in land use should include in their business plans the assessment of the impact of the activity on health and in Latin America in Chagas disease. They must consider the exposure and protection of the worker to the vector and the pathogen, environmental changes and biological communities that alter the natural cycle, the increase in the population density of humans and domestic animals attracted by economic growth, a scenario usually accompanied by precarious housing and conditions. Sanitary conditions, low capacity for surveillance and health care, factors that open alternative routes for infection by |
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| SDG 9 | Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialisation and foster innovation | ↑ | Efforts around the world to ensure food quality can be seen in advancing health standards and regulatory frameworks in several countries to prevent foodborne diseases. These advances include the control of oral transmission and expansion of Chagas disease. However, there is an urgent need for the sanitary surveillance system to be broad and efficient to identify potential risks, maintain risk analyses and control outbreaks of foodborne diseases worldwide. |
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| SDG 10 | Reduce inequality within and among countries | ↑ | Chagas disease is a social disease traditionally installed in poor communities with low assistance and political and economic inequalities. In the last 30 years it has expanded to the Amazon region with agricultural, urban, mining, livestock and timber extraction. The loss of territory by traditional and indigenous populations and the prospect of improving the quality of life and job offers in urban centers, inside and outside Latin American countries, stimulated the mobility of infected people coming from these areas, to other non-endemics. Migration to Europe and the United States (more than 300,000 legal immigrants) expanded the distribution of the disease. Although in many of these areas there is no possibility of maintaining transmission, the disease becomes a problem due to its morbidity and other forms of non-vector transmission. |
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| SDG 11 | Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable | ↑ | The maintenance of vector transmission of Chagas disease is closely related to human settements that provide habitat for several species of insect vectors. Adobe wall homes and corrugated metal roofing shelter triatomines vectors and subsistence living without drinking water sources contribute to the occurrence of Chagas disease. Although this scenario is still common in rural areas, colonisation and adaptation of vectors to urban constructions is increasing. |
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| SDG 12 | Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns | ↑ | The consumption of açaí and other fruits and plants can lead to the risk of oral infection by |
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| SDG 13 | Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts | ↑ | Triatominae, vectors of Chagas disease, occur in tropical and subtropical regions. For the establishment and population stability, these vectors need protection from climatic extremes, environments whose relative humidity does not exceed the annual average of 60% and a regular source of food (blood). Global climate and environmental changes can alter these parameters, increase temperature and expand the geographic distribution of these insects and make new habitats available. |
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| SDG 14 | Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development | × | no impact identified | |
| SDG 15 | Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss | ↑ | Studies point out the impact of biodiversity loss on Chagas disease transmission and relate the lower richness of small mammals and the high infection in domestic dogs as a risk factor to Chagas disease transmission. This scenario seems to be consolidated after the human invasion of forest systems because the presence of domestic animals and synanthropic mammals, competent hosts of |
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| SDG 16 | Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels | ↑ | In South America and the Caribbean, many populations live in areas of armed conflict or social instability that hinder or even prevent vector control, the diagnosis and treatment of Chagas disease, among others. In these locations, the persistence of violence instills fear and abandonment of public power, leading thousands to cities and countries in search of security and quality of life. |
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| SDG 17 | Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalise the global partnership for sustainable development | Chagas disease is a tropical and subtropical disease that affects millions of people in several countries, especially poor and migrant people. Improving research and knowledge, sustainable economy, social justice, public policies, biodiversity conservation and surveillance and assistance and health actions can only be achieved with intersectoral partners and joint efforts. |
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↑ : advances in the objective positively impact the reduction of Chagas disease; → : advances in the objective indirectly contribute to the reduction of Chagas disease; × : no impact identified