Affiliation:
1. Department of Animal Biology and Conservation Science, University of Ghana, Legon, P.O. Box LG 67, Accra, Ghana
Abstract
Mass drug administration (MDA) has made a significant impact on the control of lymphatic filariasis (LF) since the establishment of the Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis. However, its implementation is associated with several challenges, hampering interruption of parasite transmission and LF elimination in endemic areas. This study assessed the impact of MDA by comparing baseline microfilaria and antigen prevalence with those after three years (mid-term) and ≥5 years of MDA implementation and their respective prevalence reductions and identified specific challenges that may hinder its effective implementation. Three years of MDA implementation were observed to have microfilaria prevalence reductions (88.54% to 98.66%) comparable to those of studies that implemented MDA for five to 10 years (≥5 years, 79.23% to 98.26%). Inadequate community understanding of and participation in the LF MDA programme are major drawbacks to its effective implementation. The implementation of MDA that incorporates community participation, incentivisation, education, and training strategies has the potential of increasing MDA coverage and compliance, thereby interrupting parasite transmission and reducing microfilarial prevalence to levels that warrant LF elimination.
Subject
General Medicine,Microbiology,Parasitology
Reference44 articles.
1. The global distribution of lymphatic filariasis, 2000–18: a geospatial analysis
2. Morbidity management in the Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis: a review of the scientific literature
3. Lymphatic filariasis: managing morbidity and preventing disability: an aide-mémoire for national programme managers;World Health Organization,2021
4. Measuring culture change as an evaluation indicator: applying cultural consensus analysis to cultural models of lymphatic filariasis in Haiti;K. M. Simpson,2008