19 research outputs found

    VICS: Then and now

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    VICS: Thank you: You have always taken care of me

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    VICS: Her blood in his veins

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    VICS: will you keep her now?

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    VICS: Much has changed — much remains to be done

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    VICS: Putting Abakar back together

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    VICS: The ragtag road-beaters of Cameroon

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    Elimination of Active Trachoma after Two Topical Mass Treatments with Azithromycin 1.5% Eye Drops

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    Trachoma is the leading cause of infectious blindness worldwide, accounting for 1.3 million cases of blindness. Although it has disappeared in many regions of the world, trachoma is still endemic in Africa, Eastern Mediterranean, Latin America, Asia, and Australia. The WHO has currently set a target of 2020 for controlling trachoma to a low enough level that resulting blindness will not be a major public health concern. Topical tetracycline was for a long time the recommended treatment for active trachoma, but compliance to the regimen is extremely poor. Azithromycin has properties that make it an ideal treatment for Chlamydia trachomatis: high efficacy, intracellular accumulation, and a long tissue half-life. There is now a new mass treatment of trachoma by azithromycin 1.5% eye drops which is as effective as the oral route. In the test health district of Kolofata, Cameroon, the prevalence of trachoma among children dramatically decreased from 31% to less than 5% after 2 treatments. A third treatment was performed in January 2010. An epidemiological surveillance is implemented to see if this removal will be permanent. It also avoids misuse of oral azithromycin and the eye drops are directly treating the site of the infection

    Ebola-it came, killed, and crept away. What are the lessons learned?

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    This talk covers the disease in a non-technical way, a short history of Ebola, the various reasons why the epidemic got out of control, how it went away, and why the U.S. got involved, the setup of the U.S. Ebola Treatment Center in Liberia. Based on her personal experience, she also comments on the hidden cost of the epidemic, what we did right and what we got wrong, and how we might do better next time.Fairbanks School of Public Healt
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