Tuesday, 30 March 2021

Sleeping Sickness no longer considered a public health threat in Côte d'Ivoire.

Côte d'Ivoire has successfully eliminated Human African Trypanosomiasis, also known as 'Sleeping Sickness', as a public health problem, becoming the second African country after Togo to be validated by the World Health Organization, according to a press release isssued on 25 March 2021.

'I dedicate this milestone to decades of hard work and the individual contribution of every single health worker who braved some of the toughest challenges in reaching populations, often in remote rural areas,' said Eugène Aka Aouele, Minister of Health and Public Hygiene of Côte d'Ivoire. 'Our challenge now is to maintain the required level of surveillance and, with the help of everyone, to achieve interruption of transmission by 2030.' 

In the 1990s, Côte d'Ivoire reported hundreds of cases of Sleeping Sickness every year. Cases have progressively declined over the last 2 decades, and in the past few years, the country has reported fewer than 10 cases per year. At this low level, Côte d'Ivoire qualifies as having eliminated the disease as a public health problem. 

This achievement is attributed to robust control and surveillance measures, active (and passive) screening of people at risk, and targeted vector control, which helped to strongly decrease the number of cases in areas of transmission. Hospitals and health centres checked patients using specific diagnostic tests, while laboratory mobile units screened people in villages. 

 
A Human African Trypanosomiasis mobile unit in Côte d’Ivoire. CT Brink/World Health Organization.

'Côte d’Ivoire’s achievement marks an important step that brings Africa closer to eliminating Sleeping Sickness,' said Matshidiso Moeti, the World Health Organization's Regional Director for Africa. 'Sustained control measures over the past two decades have brought a significant decline in cases, a positive sign that many countries will soon be crossing this landmark.'

Treatment of infected people meant that the vector, the Tsetse Fly, Glossina sp., could no longer transmit the disease to others. This had to be maintained over years in order to progressively eliminate the disease.  

 

'The result which Côte d'Ivoire has achieved after several decades of fighting against Human African Trypanosomiasis, reflects the excellent leadership of the Ministry of Health and Public Hygiene through the Directorate of the Human African Trypanosomiasis Elimination Programme” said Jean Marie Vianny Yameogo, the World Health Organization's Representative in Côte d'Ivoire.” It is also the expression of the commitment and determination of the regional and departmental health directorates, health professionals, the communities' participation in control strategies and the vitality of the partnership.'

Two other countries, Benin and Equatorial Guinea, have submitted their dossiers to the World Health Organization, requesting validation for elimination of Sleeping Sickness as a public health problem. To achieve validation for the elimination of a public health problem, a complete dossier must be submitted to present detailed information on the past and present disease incidence throughout the territory. The country must show evidence of effective, ongoing surveillance to prove that the capacity of detecting the disease is strong. The figures must be below the specific thresholds required by the World Health Organization, which means one case per 10 000 inhabitants in all districts, during a five-year period.

Under the World Health Organization’s leadership, national control programmes, bilateral cooperation agencies and nongovernmental organizations have substantially reduced cases of the disease to unprecedented low numbers, specifically less than 1000 globally, before 2020.  

Sleeping sickness is a potentially fatal disease spread by the bite of an infected Tsetse Fly, which are native to the African continent. More than 60 million people living mainly in rural parts of 36 countries across East, Central and West Africa are at risk of contracting the disease.

The World Health Organization and partners are targeting the interruption of transmission of the Trypanosoma brucei gambiense form of the disease in all endemic countries by 2030. 

 
A blood sample showing infection with Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, the causative agent for African Sleeping Sickness. Public Health Image Library/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Wikimedia Commons.

The main approaches to controlling Sleeping Sickness include reducing the reservoirs of infection and reducing the presence of the Tsetse Fly.

Screening of people at risk helps identify patients during the early stage of the disease. If diagnosis is made early, it is possible to avoid complicated and risky treatment procedures during the advanced stage.

Human African Trypanosomiasis is a vector-borne parasitic disease caused by infection with Protozoan parasites belonging to the genus Trypanosoma. The causative parasite is transmitted to Humans through the bite of a Tsetse Fly which has acquired the infection from Humans or Animals harbouring the Human pathogenic parasites.  

 
The life cycle of the Trypanosoma parasite, the causative agent for African Sleeping Sickness. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

There are two forms of the disease: one due to Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, which is found in 24 countries in West and Central Africa and accounts for more than 98% of cases; and another due to Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense, which is found in 13 countries in East and Southern Africa and accounts for the remaining cases.

When bitten by an infected Tsetse Fly, a red sore may erupt within a few weeks. The person may experience fever, swollen lymph nodes, aching muscles and joints, headaches and irritability.  

People who become infected feel lethargic and sleepy during the day, then awake but exhausted at night. This is followed by neuropsychiatric and sensory disorders, and then a coma. Death may occur within months or even years. 

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