Publication | Open Access
Managing the Fight against Onchocerciasis in Africa: APOC Experience
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Citations
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2015
Year
Parasitic DiseaseEpidemiologyHelminthologyRiver BlindnessGlobal HealthParasite ControlClinical EpidemiologyInternational HealthDisease ControlEradication Of DiseaseEnvironmental DiseasePublic HealthAcronym OcpWest AfricaGlobal Health ChallengeApoc ExperienceAfrican StudiesParasitology
Due to the socioeconomic impact of human onchocerciasis (commonly referred to as river blindness) in West Africa, the Onchocerciasis Control Programme in the Volta River Basin (OCP) was instituted [1]. This initial programme started in 1975 and covered seven West African countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, Niger, and Togo. However, later evidence indicated that endemic areas outside the initial area posed a threat to the achievement of the OCP and, hence, the Programme was extended southward and westward to include four additional countries, bringing the total number of countries covered by OCP to eleven. The formal name was then changed to the Onchocerciasis Control Programme in West Africa, retaining the acronym OCP. OCP used aerial larviciding as its principle strategy to control the vectors of human onchocerciasis, members of the Simulium damnosum complex, in the absence of a safe drug for mass treatment against the parasites [2]. Efforts to control onchocerciasis evolved in 1987 when ivermectin was donated to kill the juvenile worms that cause the various symptoms associated with the disease. As a result of the donation, OCP instituted a new strategy of chemotherapy in combination with vector control. In the 11 countries covered by OCP, this two-prong approach led to the virtual elimination of onchocerciasis as a public health problem and as an obstacle to socioeconomic development. The availability of a donated drug effective against the parasite and safe for mass drug administration, coupled with evidence that other pathological effects of onchocerciasis were equally important socioeconomic threats, led to the decision that onchocerciasis should be controlled in all endemic countries in Africa (Fig 1). Open in a separate window Fig 1 Onchocerciasis-endemic countries in Africa, showing countries covered by the OCP and initially by APOC. Map from 2010. Note that South Sudan gained independence in 2011, becoming the 20th APOC country.
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