44 research outputs found

    'Where are the dead flies!': perceptions of local communities towards the deployment of Tiny Targets to control tsetse in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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    The National Programme for the control of human African trypanosomiasis in Democratic Republic of Congo includes a large-scale vector control operation using Tiny Targets. These are small panels of insecticide-impregnated cloth that are deployed in riverine habitat where tsetse flies concentrate. The effectiveness of Tiny Targets depends partly on acceptance by local communities. In 2018, we conducted research to explore the perception and acceptability of Tiny Targets in two different village clusters where Tiny Targets had been deployed by the local community or external teams. We conducted fourteen focus group discussions and seven semistructured interviews in three villages from each cluster in the Yasa Bonga health zone. Our findings showed that acceptability was better in the cluster where communities were involved in the deployment of Tiny Targets. Also in this cluster, awareness about Tiny Targets was satisfactory and the project was implemented within local customs, which promoted a positive perception of Tiny Targets and their benefits. In the cluster where external teams deployed Tiny Targets, a lack of information and communication, stereotypes applied by communities towards the deployment teams and the impression of inadequate respect for local customs led to anxiety and a misleading interpretation of the purpose of Tiny Targets and negatively influenced acceptability. This study highlights the importance of involving communities for programme acceptance. Our research underlined how awareness campaigns and communication are essential, but also how working within the scope of community social norms and customs are equally important. Prospects for the successful use of Tiny Targets are greater when communities are involved because the use can be adapted to social norms

    Efficacy, safety, and dose of Pafuramidine, a new oral drug for treatment of first stage sleeping sickness, in a phase 2a clinical study and phase 2b randomized clinical studies

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    Sleeping sickness (human African trypanosomiasis [HAT]) is caused by protozoan parasites and characterized by a chronic progressive course, which may last up to several years before death. We conducted two Phase 2 studies to determine the efficacy and safety of oral pafuramidine in African patients with first stage HAT.; The Phase 2a study was an open-label, non-controlled, proof-of-concept study where 32 patients were treated with 100 mg of pafuramidine orally twice a day (BID) for 5 days at two trypanosomiasis reference centers (Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo [DRC]) between August 2001 and November 2004. The Phase 2b study compared pafuramidine in 41 patients versus standard pentamidine therapy in 40 patients. The Phase 2b study was open-label, parallel-group, controlled, randomized, and conducted at two sites in the DRC between April 2003 and February 2007. The Phase 2b study was then amended to add an open-label sequence (Phase 2b-2), where 30 patients received pafuramidine for 10 days. The primary efficacy endpoint was parasitologic cure at 24 hours (Phase 2a) or 3 months (Phase 2b) after treatment completion. The primary safety outcome was the rate of occurrence of World Health Organization Toxicity Scale Grade 3 or higher adverse events. All subjects provided written informed consent.; Pafuramidine for the treatment of first stage HAT was comparable in efficacy to pentamidine after 10 days of dosing. The cure rates 3 months post-treatment were 79% in the 5-day pafuramidine, 100% in the 7-day pentamidine, and 93% in the 10-day pafuramidine groups. In Phase 2b, the percentage of patients with at least 1 treatment-emergent adverse event was notably higher after pentamidine treatment (93%) than pafuramidine treatment for 5 days (25%) and 10 days (57%). These results support continuation of the development program for pafuramidine into Phase 3

    Should I Get Screened for Sleeping Sickness? A Qualitative Study in Kasai Province, Democratic Republic of Congo

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    Active screening strategies are common disease control interventions in the context of poor and remote rural communities with no direct access to healthcare facilities. For such activities to be as effective as possible, it is necessary that they are well adapted to local socio-economic and cultural settings. Our aim was to gain insight into the barriers communities in the Kasai-Oriental province of the Democratic Republic of Congo experience in relation to their participation in active screening activities for African sleeping sickness. Participation rates seem to be especially low in this province compared to other endemic regions in the country. We found several important factors to be in play, a number of which could be addressed by adapting the operational procedures of the mobile teams that perform the active screening activities (e.g., improved confidentiality during the screening procedure). However, more profound considerations were found in the form of regional beliefs related to the treatment of the disease. Although not based on rational grounds, these prohibitions seem to pose a significant barrier in a person's decision to seek diagnosis and treatment. A better understanding of these prohibitions and their origin could lead to improved participation rates for sleeping sickness screening in Kasai-Oriental

    Cardiac Alterations in Human African Trypanosomiasis (T.b. gambiense) with Respect to the Disease Stage and Antiparasitic Treatment

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    In Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT), neurological symptoms dominate and cardiac involvement has been suggested. Because of increasing resistance to the available drugs for HAT, new compounds are desperately needed. Evaluation of cardiotoxicity is one parameter of drug safety, but without knowledge of the baseline heart involvement in HAT, cardiologic findings and drug-induced alterations will be difficult to interpret. The electrocardiogram (ECG) is a tool to evaluate cardiac involvement and the risk of arrythmias. We analysed the ECG of 465 HAT patients and compared them with the ECG of 61 healthy volunteers. In HAT patients the QTc interval was prolonged. This comprises a risk of fatal arrhythmias if new drugs with antiarrhythmic potential will be used. Further, repolarization changes and low voltage were more frequent than in healthy controls. This could be explained by an inflammation of the heart. Treatment of HAT was associated with appearance of repolarization changes but not with a QTc prolongation. These changes appear to be associated with the disease, but not with a specific drug. The main conclusion of this study is that heart involvement is frequent in HAT and mostly well tolerated. However, it can become relevant, if new compounds with antiarrhythmic potential will be used

    Sociocultural factors and control of human African trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo

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    RESUMELa Trypanosomiase Humaine Africaine (THA) appelĂ©e Ă©galement « maladie du sommeil» est une maladie parasitaire provoquĂ©e par un protozoaire du genre Trypanosoma dont deux sous-espĂšces (T. brucei gambiense et T. brucei rhodesiense) sont pathogĂšnes Ă  l’homme. La stratĂ©gie de lutte contre cette maladie est essentiellement basĂ©e sur le dĂ©pistage prĂ©coce et le traitement des malades, complĂ©tĂ© avec le contrĂŽle du vecteur. Cependant, l’utilisation du service de dĂ©pistage de la THA par les communautĂ©s exposĂ©es reprĂ©sente un dĂ©fi majeur. L’adhĂ©sion aux campagnes de dĂ©pistage actif avec des Ă©quipes mobiles spĂ©cialisĂ©es Ă©tait en-dessous de 50% dans certains villages endĂ©miques fin des annĂ©es nonante. De surcroĂźt, l’utilisation des services de santĂ© fixes en RDC est si faible que ceci compromet le dĂ©pistage passif dans les formations sanitaires fixes. Notre hypothĂšse est que cette faible utilisation des services de santĂ© pourrait elle-mĂȘme ĂȘtre due Ă  un problĂšme d’acceptabilitĂ© du dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA par les communautĂ©s vivant dans les zones de transmission de la THA. Tout ceci compromet l’élimination de la THA comme problĂšme de santĂ© publique, un but que s’est fixĂ© la communautĂ© internationale d’ici 2020.Ce travail a comme objectif d’explorer cette dimension socioculturelle de la maladie qui est souvent nĂ©gligĂ©e dans le contrĂŽle de la THA et gĂ©nĂ©rer une meilleure connaissance de ces aspects.Nous avons rĂ©alisĂ© cinq Ă©tudes en total pour adresser la question de la sous-utilisation des services de dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA par les communautĂ©s et sa relation avec l’acceptabilitĂ© des services. Nous avons d’abord dĂ©veloppĂ© une premiĂšre Ă©tude qui Ă©value les rĂ©sultats du traitement de la THA en analysant rĂ©trospectivement les donnĂ©es de routine du programme de contrĂŽle de la THA pour l’annĂ©e 2006 Ă  2008. Ensuite, nous avons rĂ©alisĂ© trois Ă©tudes qualitatives par focus group (groupe focalisĂ©) et entretiens individuels pour documenter la dimension socioculturelle de la lutte contre la THA. D’abord une Ă©tude qui a explorĂ© les perceptions sur la THA dans la communautĂ©, suivi par une Ă©tude qui explore les perceptions sur le traitement de la THA et une autre qui se concentre sur les pratiques diagnostics des professionnels de santĂ© face Ă  un syndrome neurologique en contexte de ressources limitĂ©es. Une cinquiĂšme Ă©tude combine une enquĂȘte-mĂ©nage avec des focus groups et des entretiens individuels pour explorer les perceptions de la communautĂ© sur la santĂ© en gĂ©nĂ©ral et les services de santĂ©. Nous avons comparĂ© les obstacles Ă  l’utilisation des services de dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA identifiĂ©s dans ce travail avec les messages de sensibilisation sur la THA utilisĂ©s au programme de contrĂŽle de la THA en RDC et nous avons dĂ©veloppĂ© des recommandations stratĂ©giques.L’évaluation des indicateurs de performances sur l’issue de traitement montre que le taux de suivi post-thĂ©rapeutique est faible dans son ensemble :25 % pour le premier suivi de six mois et moins d’un pourcent des patients revient pour la derniĂšre visite de contrĂŽle au mois 24. Nous avons aussi observĂ© dans cette Ă©tude un taux d’échec au mĂ©larsoprol et Ă  la pentamidine respectivement de 30% et de 22 % au KasaĂŻ Oriental qui sont cependant difficilement interprĂ©tables, car le dĂ©nominateur est incomplet. Comme trĂšs peu de patients reviennent au contrĂŽle post-thĂ©rapeutique, cette proportion est probablement biaisĂ©e vers ceux qui sont en Ă©chec de traitement.L’étude de perception de la THA montre que la maladie est bien connue dans les communautĂ©s vivant dans les zones Ă  risque. Par contre, plusieurs obstacles au dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA ont Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ©s. Les plus importants sont :la toxicitĂ© des mĂ©dicaments de la THA, les obstacles financiers, l’inadĂ©quation entre le programme de dĂ©pistage des Ă©quipes mobiles et les occupations des communautĂ©s, les interdits qui accompagnent le traitement de la THA, le manque de confidentialitĂ© et la peur de la ponction lombaire. L’étude sur la perception du traitement de la THA a montrĂ© que le mĂ©larsoprol est perçu comme un mĂ©dicament toxique et est surnommĂ© « mĂ©dicament des interdits ». Par contre, le rĂ©gime NECT est perçu comme un nouveau mĂ©dicament moins toxique qui a rendu les interdits liĂ©s au mĂ©larsoprol obsolĂštes sauf un seul, celui de ne pas avoir de rapport sexuel pendant la pĂ©riode de traitement et de suivi post thĂ©rapeutique qui est de 6 mois. Les interdits ont Ă©tĂ© instaurĂ©s de maniĂšre empirique par les professionnels de santĂ© et les communautĂ©s pour mitiger les effets indĂ©sirables du mĂ©larsoprol. Leur violation pourrait entrainer des consĂ©quences graves et mortelles. Ces interdits sont fortement ancrĂ©s dans les croyances de la communautĂ© et constituent aujourd’hui un obstacle au dĂ©pistage et traitement. L’étude sur les pratiques diagnostiques des professionnels de santĂ© en matiĂšre de syndrome neurologique en contexte de ressources limitĂ©es a montrĂ© qu’en zone rurale le diagnostic est principalement clinique. Les obstacles perçus au diagnostic de confirmation sont essentiellement d’ordre financier puisque le patient doit tout financer de sa poche. Autres obstacles Ă©voquĂ©s sont le manque d’outils de diagnostic et la perception de la communautĂ© qui voit le clinicien comme un devin (petit dieu) ou oracle capable de « deviner » directement la maladie sans passer par un processus diagnostique de laboratoire.L’étude sur les perceptions de la santĂ© et des services de santĂ© a montrĂ© que les capacitĂ©s de travailler (82%) et les capacitĂ©s de se mouvoir (66%) sont les signes de bonne santĂ© les plus perçus. 90% des responsables des mĂ©nages perçoivent positivement la santĂ© de leur mĂ©nage. Les opinions sur le service de santĂ© sont partagĂ©es.Les Ă©tudes prĂ©sentĂ©es dans ce travail ont gĂ©nĂ©rĂ© des nouvelles connaissances sur la dimension socioculturelle de la THA. L’analyse des messages de sensibilisation sur la THA utilisĂ©s par le programme de contrĂŽle de la THA en RDC en termes de comparaison avec les obstacles au dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA identifiĂ©s dans ce travail montre que ces aspects socioculturels bien qu’étant des vĂ©ritables goulots d’étranglements dans la dynamique de la lutte contre la THA ne sont pas bien ciblĂ©s par la communication sur la THA. Les perspectives des communautĂ©s exposĂ©es au risque de la THA doivent ĂȘtre adressĂ©es par un dialogue continu entre professionnels de santĂ© et communautĂ©s adaptĂ© aux rĂ©alitĂ©s locales. Ainsi il sera possible d’amĂ©liorer de maniĂšre opĂ©rationnelle les stratĂ©gies d’information, Ă©ducation et communication, et de façon plus large, le dĂ©pistage et traitement de la THA en intĂ©grant la dimension socioculturelle de la THA dans la politique de lutte contre la THA. SUMMARYHuman African Trypanosomiasis (HAT), also known as “sleeping sickness” is a parasitic disease caused by protozoa of the species Trypanosoma. There are two types that infect humans, Trypanosoma brucei gambiense and Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense. The strategy used to control sleeping sickness consists of early case detection and treatment of patients, together with vector control. Meanwhile, utilization/access to HAT screening by the affected communities remains a major challenge. Adherence to active screening programs with mobile units was below 50% in certain endemic villages end of the 90’s. Moreover, utilization of fixed health facilities in DRC is so low that it compromises passive case finding. Our hypothesis is that this low utilization of health services is caused by a problem of acceptance of case detection and treatment of HAT by the communities living in the HAT transmission zones. This compromises the target of the international community to eliminate HAT as a public health problem by 2020. This thesis wants to explore and tries to generate more knowledge on the socio-cultural aspect that is often neglected in the control of HAT. We conducted five studies to address the lack of community participation in HAT screening and treatment activities and the relation with acceptance of these services. The first study evaluated the results of HAT treatment by retrospectively analyzing data of the routine HAT control program for the period 2006-2008. Afterwards we performed three qualitative studies consisting of focus group discussions and individual interviews to document the socio-cultural dimension of the fight against HAT. The first study explored the community perceptions regarding sleeping sickness. The second study explored the perceptions regarding HAT treatment and a third study focused on diagnostic practices of health professionals in low-resource settings facing a neurological syndrome. The fifth study consists of a household survey, focus group discussions and individual interviews to explore community perception regarding health in general and health services. We compared the identified barriers to screening and treatment of HAT with awareness messages on sleeping sickness used by the HAT control program in DRC and we developed strategic recommendations. The evaluation of performance indicators for treatment showed that compliance with post-treatment follow-up is very poor: 25% for the first post-treatment follow-up examination at six months and less than 1% of the patients returns for the final examination at 24 months. In this study we also observed a treatment failure rate of respectively 30% and 22% for melarsoprol and pentamidine in Kasai-Oriental. However, these date are difficult to interpret because of an incomplete denominator. As only few patients return for follow-up visits, this proportion is probably biased towards those in treatment failure. The study on the perception of sleeping sickness shows that the disease is well known amongst the communities living in the endemic areas. However, several screening and treatment barriers were identified. The most important are: drug toxicity, financial barriers, the incompatibility between the itineraries of the mobile screening teams and the local communities’ activities, the prohibitions related to HAT treatment, lack of confidentiality and fear of lumbar punctures. The study on the perceptions regarding HAT treatment show that melarsoprol is perceived as a toxic drug and is nicknamed the ‘taboo drug’. On the other hand the NECT regime is perceived as the new drug that is less toxic and that has abolished all the taboos of melarsoprol with the important exception of sexual intercourse during the treatment period and the post-treatment follow-up period of six months. The prohibitions have been established empirically by healthcare providers and communities to mitigate the side effects of the melarsoprol regimen. Violating these restrictions is believed to cause severe and sometimes mortal complications. Communities adhere strictly to these prohibitions and this constitutes a barrier for HAT screening and treatment.The study focusing on diagnostic work-up of neurological syndromes in low-resource settings by health care providers has shown that in rural areas diagnosis is usually clinical. Barriers to confirmation of diagnosis are mainly related to the purchasing power of the patient. Other reported barriers are a lack of diagnostic tools and the communities’ perceptions associated with the care provider. Clinicians are perceived as diviners being able to directly identify the cause of the illness without using laboratory tests. The study regarding the perceptions on health and health services has shown that ability to work (82%) and ability to move (66%) are the most perceived signs of good health. 90% of the household responsibles positively perceive the health of their family. The opinions on the health services are divided. The studies presented in this thesis have generated new insights on the socio-cultural dimension of HAT. The analysis of the awareness messages on HAT in DRC compared with the reported HAT screening and treatment barriers have shown that although these sociocultural aspects are real bottlenecks in the dynamic of the fight against HAT, they are not targeted by the communication on HAT. The prospects for communities at risk of HAT should be addressed through continuous dialogue between health professionals and communities adapted to local realities.It will thus be possible to operationally improve the information strategies, education and communication, and more broadly, screening and treatment of HAT by integrating the socio-cultural dimension in the fighting policy against sleeping sickness.Doctorat en Sciencesinfo:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublishe

    Whose Elimination? Frontline Workers’ Perspectives on the Elimination of the Human African Trypanosomiasis and Its Anticipated Consequences

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    While academic literature has paid careful attention to the technological efforts―drugs, tests, and tools for vector control―deployed to eliminate Gambiense Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT), the human resources and health systems dimensions of elimination are less documented. This paper analyses the perspectives and experiences of frontline nurses, technicians, and coordinators who work for the HAT programme in the former province of Bandundu in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, at the epidemic’s very heart. The research is based on 21 semi-structured interviews conducted with frontline workers in February 2018. The results highlight distinctive HAT careers as well as social elevation through specialised work. Frontline workers are concerned about changes in active screening strategies and the continued existence of the vector, which lead them to question the possibility of imminent elimination. Managers seem to anticipate a post-HAT situation and prepare for the employment of their staff; most workers see their future relatively confidently, as re-allocated to non-vertical units. The findings suggest concrete pathways for improving the effectiveness of elimination efforts: improving active screening through renewed engagements with local leaders, conceptualising horizontal integration in terms of human resources mobility, and investing more in detection and treatment activities (besides innovation)

    Cost of a new method of active screening for human African trypanosomiasis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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    BackgroundHuman African trypanosomiases caused by the Trypanosoma brucei gambiense parasite is a lethal disease targeted for eradication. One of the main disease control strategies is active case-finding through outreach campaigns. In 2014, a new method for active screening was developed with mini, motorcycle-based, teams. This study compares the cost of two active case-finding approaches, namely the traditional mobile teams and mini mobile teams, in the two health districts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.MethodsThe financial and economic costs of both approaches were estimated from a health care provider perspective. Cost and operational data were collected for 12 months for 1 traditional team and 3 mini teams. The cost per person screened and diagnosed was calculated and univariate sensitivity analysis was conducted to identify the main cost drivers.ResultsDuring the study period in total 264,630 people were screened, and 23 HAT cases detected. The cost per person screened was lower for a mini team than for a traditional team in the study setting (US1.86versusUS1.86 versus US2.08). A comparable result was found in a scenario analysis, assuming both teams would operate in a similar setting, with the cost per person screened by a mini team 15% lower than the cost per person screened by a traditional team (1.86 vs2.14 vs 2.14). The main explanations for this lower cost are that mini teams work with fewer human resources, cheaper means of transportation and do not perform the Capillary Tube Centrifugation test or card agglutination test dilutions.DiscussionActive HAT screening with mini mobile teams has a lower cost and could be a cost-effective alternative for active case-finding. Further research is needed to determine if mini mobile teams have similar or better yields than traditional mobile teams in terms of detections and cases successfully treated

    Health work and skills in the last mile of disease elimination. Experiences from sleeping sickness health workers in South Sudan and DR Congo.

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    Human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) is considered a highly promising candidate for elimination within the next decade. This paper argues that the experiential knowledge of frontline health workers will be critical to achieve this goal. Interviews are used to explore the ways in which HAT workers understand, maintain, and adjust their skills amidst global and national challenges. We contrast two cases: South Sudan where HAT expertise is scattered and has been repeatedly rebuilt, and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where specialised mobile detection teams have pro-actively tested people at risk for almost a century. We describe HAT careers where skills are built through participation in HAT technology trials and screening programmes; in the DRC expertise is also supported through formal rotations in screening teams and HAT referral centres for new health workers. As cases fade, de-skilling is a real threat as awareness of populations and authorities diminishes and previously vertical programmes evolve, re-configuring professional development and career paths and associated opportunities for HAT practice. To avoid repeating the mistakes of the 1960s, when elimination also seemed close at hand, we need to recognise that the 'last mile' of elimination hinges on protecting the fragile expertise of frontline health workers
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