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    News, Reviews, and Articles on Onchocerciasis



    Inadequate human resource, impediment to health care delivery- Expert  Aug 10, 2008
    " The jubilee lectures, which had the theme: "GMA at 50: Ghana's Health" aimed at deepening its advocacy and policy dialogue in its quest to promote good health among people of Ghana and its commitment to the development and maintenance of the highest standards of health care delivery in the country. Prof. Akosa noted the need for more research in the health centre adding, " The work we all do, the NHIS and the health policy 2007-2011 must all be underpinned by research". He said with the... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Nigeria Health Minister urges action on Visions 2020, 20-2020Lagos, Nigeria (PANA) - Nigeria's Health Minister Hassan MuhammadLawal has challenged health stakeholders to fast-track measurestowardsmaking Nigeria a healthy nation and a leading economy by 2020.    01/08/2008   Full Text...  Aug 1, 2008
    Trachoma and onchocerciasis (river blindness), two of the "Neglected Tropical Diseases" together, account for 4% of blindness being more important in some areas of the country than in other parts of the country. In addition to the blind, there are another three million people in Nigeria whose vision is inadequate for normal functioning. (Panapress.com)

    Blindness In Old Age May Be Triggered By Hyperactive Immune Resistance  Jul 25, 2008
    ScienceDaily (July 25, 2008) Age-dependent macular degeneration (AMD) is the commonest cause of blindness in the western industrialised nations. Hereditary changes in the regulation of the immune system influence the risk of contracting AMD.. (Science Daily)

    AfDB Approves U.S. $ 24.5 Million for Onchocerciasis Control Program in Africa  Jul 16, 2008
    5 Million for Onchocerciasis Control Program in Africa ... 5 Million for Onchocerciasis Control Program in Africa ... 5 million to finance Phase II and the phasing out stage of the Onchocerciasis (river blindness) Control Programme (APOC) in 19 African countries. (allAfrica.com)

    Experts advocate multiple intervention approach for disease controlAddis Ababa, Ethiopia (PANA) - A three-day international meeting ofdisease control experts has ended here with participants advocatingtheintegration and co-implementation approach in dealing with NeglectedTropical Diseases (NTDs) and Malaria control interventions.    29/06/2008   Full Text...  Jun 29, 2008
    In one of its recommendations, this first follow-up meeting on Integration of Onchocerciasis (river blindness) Control into National Health Systems and Co-implementation of NTDs with some components of Malaria control, which took place at the Hilton Hotel, Addis Ababa, 25-27 June 2008, called on countries "to adopt the Community-Directed Intervention (CDI) strategy for scaling up integration and co-implementation of NTDs with malaria control interventions to increase access of hard-to-reach... (Panapress.com)

    Benin: The End of River Blindness  May 9, 2008
    When, in 1994, international agencies and the government first conducted a survey in Benin for river blindness, also known by the medical term onchocerciasis, between 25 percent and 98 percent of people were found to have it ... Onchocerciasis is an insect-borne disease caused by the parasite onchocerca volvulus with is transmitted by various species of blackflies of the Simulium genus ... But onchocerciasis is still a major cause of blindness in many other African countries with the result that... (allAfrica.com)

    Samba prescribes recipe against food crisis in AfricaOuagadougou, Burkina Faso (PANA) - To survive the looming globalhunger tsunami, Africa must embrace the 3Rs - "re-agriculturalise,re-Africanise and re-democratise," according to Dr. Ebrahim MalickSamba, the 1992 co-laureate of the Africa Prize for Leadership,awarded by the New York-based Hunger project.    04/05/2008   Full Text...  May 4, 2008
    Before his retirement in 2004 after 10 years as Regional Director of the Brazzaville-based WHO/AFRO, the Gambian surgeon had headed the Burkina Faso-based Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP) for West Africa for 14 years from 1981, leading a successful campaign against river blindness in the politically restive sub-region. Apart from putting the parasitic, black fly-transmitted disease under control in 11 onchocerciasis-endemic West African countries, the OCP also increased the income of... (Panapress.com)

    APOC advocates community empowerment to meet health MDGs in AfricaOuagadougou, Burkina Faso (PANA) - African communities, especially thepoor and those in the hard-to-reach areas, shouldbe empowered to manage their own health delivery systems if thecontinent is to achieve the health Millennium Development Goals(MDGs) by 2015, Dr. Uche Veronica Amazigo, the Director of the WHOAfrican Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC), said here.    02/05/2008   Full Text...  May 2, 2008
    Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (PANA) - African communities, especially the poor and those in the hard-to-reach areas, should be empowered to manage their own health delivery systems if the continent is to achieve the health Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015, Dr. Uche Veronica Amazigo, the Director of the WHO African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC), said here ... The community-directed treatment with ivermectin, which was launched in 1997, two years after APOC's inception, had... (Panapress.com)

    World Health Day marked  Apr 8, 2008
    He said WHO had also supported the formulation of ethical and evidence-based health policies and strategies, both global and national health and disease specific like malaria, HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis, integrated disease surveillance and response, maternal and child health, non-communicable diseases, health promotion and nutrition, guinea worm and buruli ulcer, vaccine preventable diseases and onchocerciasis. Dr Saweka assured Ghana of WHO's continuous technical support in health related... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Meeting Ghana's First Female Scientist - Dr Letitia Obeng  Mar 20, 2008
    For her thesis, Dr Obeng investigated into the life cycle of the Simulium fly popularly called the black fly, which transmitted the worm that caused onchocerciasis or river blindness. This made her the first Ghanaian female to obtain a PhD in Simuliidae from the Liverpool University in the United Kingdom Letitia's love for water and the environment is amply demonstrated without one being told as soon as one entered her compound and her living room. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    USAID Fights Neglected Tropical Diseases  Feb 23, 2008
    The initiative will build on U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) investments in NTDs control and will target seven major diseases: lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis); schistosomiasis (snail fever); trachoma (eye infection); onchocerciasis (river blindness); and three soil-transmitted helminthes (hookworm, roundworm, and whipworm). Approximately one billion people, mostly in the developing world, suffer from one or more NTDs. (PR Newswire)

    Fact Sheet: Fighting Neglected Tropical Diseases Around The World  Feb 20, 2008
    This Initiative will make a total of $350 million available over five years to provide integrated treatment of more than 300 million people in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and target seven major NTDs: lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis); schistosomiasis (snail fever); trachoma (eye infection); onchocerciasis (river blindness); and three soil-transmitted helminthes (STHs hookworm, roundworm, whipworm). This investment increases the United States' commitment to NTDs from $15 million in 2008 to... (White House News Releases)

    The Rwanda Cure  Feb 15, 2008
    Merck (nyse: - - )'s 20-year-program to donate its antiparasitic ivermectin has helped treat 530 million cases of onchocerciasis (river blindness), spread by black flies in some parts of Africa; it has prevented 40,000 cases of blindness per year. Cases of Guinea worm, a parasite that slowly burns through the skin, are down from 3. (Forbes)

    River Blindness Parasite Shows Signs Of Resistance To Only Effective Drug  Feb 2, 2008
    1, 2008) Onchocerciasis is an infection caused by Onchocerca volvulus, a parasite nematode worm transmitted to humans by a species of black fly of the Simulium genus whose larvae develop in fast-flowing rivers ... Ivermectin, a medicine capable of killing the parasite embryos (the microfilariae) circulating in the organism of patients and temporarily interrupting the nematode's reproduction, is the only treatment used for onchocerciasis control ... Since 1995, the African Programme for... (Science Daily)

    Poor Americans Suffer Hidden Burden Of Parasitic And Other Neglected Diseases  Jan 2, 2008
    1, 2008) Large numbers of the poorest Americans living in the United States are suffering from some of the same parasitic infections that affect the poor in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, says the Editor-in-Chief of PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases. In an article entitled "Poverty and Neglected Diseases in the 'Other' America," Professor Peter Hotez (George Washington University and the Sabin Vaccine Institute) says that there is evidence that the parasitic diseases toxocariasis, cysticercosis... (Science Daily)

    Neglected tropical diseases burden those overseas, but travelers also at risk  Dec 26, 2007
    Though little known to most Americans, lymphatic filariasis, trachoma, leishmaniasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis and other so-called neglected tropical diseases are responsible for severe health burdens, especially among the worlds poorest people ... The researchers found that filarial infections responsible for such diseases as onchocerciasis (river blindness), lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis) and loiasis (African eyeworm illness) made up 271 (0. (EurekAlert!)

    Cte d'Ivoire: River Blindness is Back  Dec 25, 2007
    The World Health Organization (WHO) in 2002 closed its West Africa programme to eliminate river blindness, or onchocerciasis, as a public health threat ... 29 percent of under-five children there suffer from onchocerciasis ... "These results show that the situation has become alarming in these zones, where the disease had been eradicated," Health Minister Remi Allah Kouadio told reporters on 19 December, following an onchocerciasis conference in Brussels. (allAfrica.com)

    Parasitic Tropical Diseases In The Americas -- A Legacy Of Slavery -- Can Be Eliminated  Nov 27, 2007
    26, 2007) Although it has been speculated for more than a century that the slave trade was responsible for bringing many tropical diseases to the Americas, only recently has convincing evidence shown that lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis), schistosomiasis, and onchocerciasis (river blindness) originated in this way ... "Lymphatic filariasis, schistosomiasis, and onchocerciasis were most likely imported to the Americas through transportation of millions of persons from sub-Saharan Africa to... (Science Daily)

    Medical researchers urged not to compromise quality  Oct 13, 2007
    Dr Thomas Kruppa, Director of KCCR, said the Centre was at the forefront of filariasis research revolutionizing the treatment of onchocerciasis and elephantiasis, adding that, the Centre had been selected as one of the 8 centres in Africa to participate in the clinical development of the promising malaria vaccine, which if proved successful would save millions of children's lives in Africa. The Centre was also building up capacity into clinical research with the aim of testing drugs and vaccines... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Divergence receives $734,000 NIH grant  Sep 25, 2007
    Another filarial parasite-caused disease, onchocerciasis or river blindness, is a major cause of infectious blindness. "Filarial infections cause substantial human morbidity, especially in Africa and Southeast Asia," James McCarter, Divergence's president and chief scientific officer, said in a statement. (St. Louis Business Journal, MO)

    Genetic Code Of Parasitic Worm That Causes Elephantiasis Revealed  Sep 22, 2007
    The WHO also estimates that about half a million people around the world have lost their vision due to onchocerciasis, or river blindness, which is caused by another type of filarial parasite. "Filarial diseases are treatable, but the current treatments were discovered decades ago," says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "There is an urgent need for new discoveries in this area because of the limitations of the current drugs, including toxicities and the development of resistance." The B.... (Science Daily)

    More Problems For Flood Victims  Sep 20, 2007
    Bolgatanga -- THE predicament of people living in the flood-hit areas of the three northern regions has worsened with the influx of black flies, the tiny insects which cause river blindness or onchocerciasis, the multi-sectoral damage-assessment team from Accra has found. The black fly, locally called "behn" is currently common in the Upper East Region, especially in areas between the Red and White Volta Rivers along the Bolgatanga, Bawku road. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Special Security Camp for Bui  Sep 13, 2007
    Mr. Baffour Awuah said this during the launching of the Bui Disinfestation Project being executed by Zoomlion Ghana Limited, a private Waste and Sanitation Management Company, the National Secretariat of the Onchocerciasis with funding from the Ministry of Finance, at Bongaase in the Tain District. The project is aimed at riding the area of black flies and create a congenial atmosphere for workers and residents during and after the construction of the hydro electric dam at Bui, expected to... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Zoomlion to rid Bui of Black flies  Sep 10, 2007
    Bui, (B/A), Sept. 10, GNA-Zoomlion Ghana Limited, a private waste and sanitation management company, in collaboration with the National Onchocerciasis Secretariat have embarked on a disinfestation exercise along the Black Volta River in the Brong Ahafo Region to rid the area of black flies ... Mr. Gilbert Delly, official of the Secretariat, said onchocerciasis was detected in the 1980's in the country. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    River Blindness Parasite Becoming Resistant To Standard Treatment  Sep 6, 2007
    Ivermectin, the standard drug for treating river blindness (onchocerciasis), is causing genetic changes in the parasite that causes the disease, according to a new study by Roger Prichard (McGill University, Canada) and colleagues, published on August 30, 2007 in the open-access journal PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases ... larva, or black fly, is a vector of the disease, onchocerciasis, or river blindness ... According to this study, the genetic selection shown "could have implications for the... (Science Daily)

    River blindness 'curse' lifted  Aug 20, 2007
    The control of one of these diseases, onchocerciasis or river blindness, in West Africa is a true success story for a continent where reports of success stories are typically in short supply ... Onchocerciasis is caused by a round worm that is transmitted among humans by black flies ... The Onchocerciasis Control Program, established in 1974 and led by the World Health Organization of the United Nations, has controlled this disease in 11 West African countries. (San Francisco Chronicle -- Opinion)

    Treating River Blindness  Jul 10, 2007
    Onchocerciasis Can Be Treated, Perhaps Even Eradicated, But Not Yet ... It has been a useful treatment for other filarial diseases (diseases caused by species of worms that produce microfilariae); however, in onchocerciasis, the drug causes serious side effects, making its widespread use impossible ... Treatment of onchocerciasis with DEC must be carefully monitored. (Suite101.com)

    New Drug Resistance Found In River Blindness: Parasite Could Re-emerge As Major Scourge  Jun 29, 2007
    A 20-year effort to control the spread of onchocerciasis, or river blindness, in African communities is threatened by the development of drug resistance in the parasite that causes the disease, a study by McGill University researchers has found ... Of those communities, 19 had been receiving annual doses of ivermectin, the only widely available drug used to treat onchocerciasis. (Science Daily)

    Drug-resistant river blindness spreading  Jun 16, 2007
    The discovery could force public health officials to rethink strategies for controlling river blindness, also known as onchocerciasis. In The Lancet study, researchers tested 2,501 people in disease-endemic regions of Ghana from 2004 to 2005, and found 19. (MSNBC -- Health)

    River blindness resistance fears  Jun 15, 2007
    River blindness (onchocerciasis) is caused by a nematode worm which is transmitted by a black fly ... He carried out a study of the West African Onchocerciasis Control Programme among Ghanaian communities that had received between six and 18 years of annual ivermectin treatment and other communities that had never received treatment. (BBC News)

    River blindness parasite resisting treatment  Jun 15, 2007
    River blindness or onchocerciasis is an eye and skin disease caused by the filaria worm. It is transmitted to humans by blackflies breeding along fast-flowing tropical rivers and streams. (Scientific American)

    Eradicating onchocerciasis-related blindness  May 24, 2007
    Impact of long-term treatment of onchocerciasis with ivermectin in Ecuador: potential for elimination of infection ... Onchocerciasis is a leading cause of blindness worldwide and elimination of the infection is an important health priority ... A strategy of annual to twice-annual treatments with ivermectin has been used in endemic communities for onchocerciasis in Ecuador for up to 14 years. (BioMed Central)

    WHO Developing Plan to Tackle Neglected Tropical Diseases  Apr 20, 2007
    A trusted source of newsand information since 1942. And, breaking barriers has been a long process of thinking, moving from 'I am in charge of leprosy' to 'I am in charge of neglected tropical disease of which leprosy is one of the diseases' is a big change in the way things are doing. (Voice of America)

    Carter proposes health, education alliance against diseasesAddis Ababa, Ethiopia (PANA) - For African nations to be able toeradicate most of the diseases endemic within the continent,alliances must be created between the health and educationministries, former US President Jimmy Carter suggested here Monday.    12/02/2007   Full Text...  Feb 12, 2007
    In addition, Carter said that ten zones of Ethiopia were endemic with river blindness (Onchocerciasis), which is caused by a parasitic worm and transmitted by blackflies ... "We have only addressed diseases not commonly known, but the primary victims of these diseases are children. Trachoma and Onchocerciasis cause unnecessary suffering to children," Carter noted, urging the African ministers at the conference to explore ways by which they could replicate the Ethiopian initiative in their own... (Panapress.com)

    Amansie West District records high still births  Feb 7, 2007
    Mr Adomako said apart from malaria, which topped the diseases, the hospital recorded 113 buruli ulcer cases, 13 HIV/AIDS, 15 onchocerciasis, three yaws and 17 tuberculosis (TB). He said the high cost of service delivery was one of the problems facing the District as the District Health Directorate spent 4. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Stakeholders meet on neglected tropical diseases  Feb 7, 2007
    Five of the ancient neglected tropical diseases 96 Trachoma; Lymphatic Filariasisl; Onchocerciasis; Schistosomiasis and intestinal worms - are associated with poverty and poor environment. Opening a three-day stakeholders meeting on Strategic Planning on Neglected Tropical Disease Programme in Accra, Prof. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Malaria Strategic Document to be revised - Official  Feb 3, 2007
    Professor John Gyarpong, Head of the Health Research Unit of GHS, spoke on the neglected diseases like onchocerciasis, popularly known as river blindness, and Lymphatic Filariasis, which is Elephantiasis, were some of the diseases which attacked people but were not talked about. He said strategies had been put in place to scale up interventions and called for more human resource, infrastructure and logistics as well as funding from the Government to run programmes. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Africa: Grant Boosts Joint Fight Against Neglected Diseases  Dec 22, 2006
    The five diseases targeted in the projects are trachoma -- an eye infection causing blindness; intestinal worms; onchocerciasis - also called river blindness; schistosomiasis; and lymphatic filariasis -- also known as elephantiasis. Although usually non-fatal and easily curable, NTDs are widespread in poor settings and often cause chronic disability. (allAfrica.com)

    The Neglected Tropical Diseases  Dec 22, 2006
    Seven of the diseases are caused by helminths (worm infections): hookworm, trichuriasis, ascariasis, schistosomiasis and dracunculiasis (guinea worm), onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis. Another three are protozoan infections: leishmaniasis, trypanosomiasis and Chagas' disease. (Scientific American)

    Africa: Health Coalition Targets Diseases Affecting More Than One Billion  Oct 29, 2006
    They are river blindness (onchocerciasis), elephantiasis (lymphatic filariasis), schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis. "In the same way as we protect people against a number of vaccine-preventable diseases throughout their lives," said Dr. Lorenzo Savioli, director of WHO's Department for the Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases, "the regular and coordinated use of a few drugs can protect people against worm-induced disease, improving children's performance at school and the... (allAfrica.com)

    World Health Organization and Partners Unveil New Coordinated Approach to Treat Millions Suffering from Neglected Tropical Diseases  Oct 27, 2006
    Preventive chemotherapy in this context means using drugs that are effective against a broad range of worm infections to simultaneously treat the four most common diseases caused by worms: river blindness (onchocerciasis), elephantiasis (lymphatic filariasis), schistosomiasis, and soil-transmitted helminthiasis ... -- Onchocerciasis: Onchocerciasis is endemic in 30 countries in Africa, 6 countries in the Americas, and in Yemen in the Arabian peninsula ... The causal agent of onchocerciasis is... (PR Newswire)

    Mission to the Congo  Oct 18, 2006
    Wednesday, October 18, 2006. Staff photo by Mark CzajkowskiSeminarian Jennifer Jenkins, left, who has worked in Malawi, joins Dr. Roger Youmans of United Front Against Riverblindness and seminary Professor Elsie McKee. (Hopewell Valley News, NJ)

    This man has saved the sight of 200 million  Sep 28, 2006
    He then began to tackle river blindness (ocular onchocerciasis) and, with two colleagues, developed an understanding of river blindness that revolutionised its control. After the war, Ridley became one of the founders of the Commonwealth Society of the Blind a later director said that his research had resulted in 34 million West Africans being protected from river blindness. (TimesOnline)

    RTI to lead $100M effort to fight tropical diseases  Sep 27, 2006
    The USAID-funded program will focus on seven of the most prevalent neglected tropical diseases, including trachoma, or blinding eye infection; soil-transmitted helminths, or hookworms, ascaris and trichuris; onchocerciasis, or river blindness; schistosomiasis, or snail fever; and lymphatic filariasis, or elephantiasis. Those seven diseases were selected because they can be treated through large-scale programs using established drugs, according to RTI. The project will target countries in Africa,... (Raleigh Triangle Business Journal, NC)

    UPDATED: USAID Announces $100 Million Award to Reduce Impact of Neglected Tropical Diseases in Developing Nations  Sep 23, 2006
    "This significant investment will improve the lives of millions of people afflicted with disabling conditions through effective, low-cost, mass drug administration and associated education programs," said Richard Greene, Director of the Office of Health, Infectious Disease and Nutrition at USAID. The USAID-funded program will focus on controlling seven of the most prevalent neglected tropical diseases; trachoma (blinding eye infection), hookworm, ascaris, trichuris (three soil-transmitted... (PR Newswire)

    Strife lets river blindness regain ground in Africa  Sep 22, 2006
    Partners in the fight against the disease, also known as Onchocerciasis, are due to meet in Cameroon's capital Yaounde on Sept. 26 to 27 to discuss strategies and funding ... In 1995, the African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) was launched to cover a further 19 countries, including Cameroon. (AlertNet)

    A 150-million-cedi Optical Centre Inaugurated  Sep 15, 2006
    Dr Kobla Awadzi, Director of Onchocerciasis Chemotherapeutic Research Centre, Hohoe, in a speech read for him, warned the public to refrain from applying herbal concoction to sooth eye-related disorders, which could cause irreparable damage to the eye, leading to total blindness. He called on the public to report on their eye problems promptly, and visit a health facility regularly for screening at least once a year for the early detection and control of eye defects. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Flying Eye Hospital ends Ghana tour  Aug 26, 2006
    The remaining half consists of glaucoma (15-20 per cent), trachoma (five per cent), onchocerciasis (five per cent), childhood blindness (5-10 per cent) and others (10 per cent). 93As 75 per cent of all blindness is either preventable or treatable, it is equally important for people to take preventive steps and seek immediate care when eye disease is suspected,=94 GHS said. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    70 Ghanaians receive free eye surgery on flying eye hospital  Aug 25, 2006
    He asked the team to visit Ghana frequently especially in parts of the country where the people were afflicted by onchocerciasis. Dr Gladys Norley Ashitey, Deputy Minister of Health, said the Sector Ministry was liaising with ORBIS to come back next year to cater for Ashanti and the Northern parts of the country. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Waterborne infectious diseases could soon be consigned to history, says expert  Aug 25, 2006
    In Africa some 500 million people need treatment to control diseases such as disfiguring elephantiasis (lymphatic filariasis), river blindness (onchocerciasis), schistosomiasis, intestinal worms and the blinding eye infection trachoma. The donation of drugs by pharmaceutical companies, together with financial donations from foundations, is already having a sizeable impact, with numbers given treatment for these diseases increasing from virtually zero in 1986 to between 20 and 80 million... (EurekAlert!)

    Workshop on Oncho control in communities  Aug 23, 2006
    Sunyani (B/A) Aug. 22, GNA - More than 3,000 communities are at risk of contracting onchocerciasis (Oncho) and skin diseases in the country ... He mentioned Asubende, a small farming community with the population of less than 100 people in Pru district of Brong-Ahafo region, which has recorded 10 people with the blinding form of Onchocerciasis, adding that recent epidemiological and entomological surveys conducted in the Pru river basin demonstrated active transmission within the river with... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    ORBIS Flying Eye Hospital to offer free eye care services  Aug 9, 2006
    The major causes of avoidable blindness and visual disability include cataract, trachoma, glaucoma, onchocerciasis, corneal scarring, refractive errors, diabetic retinopathy and sickle cell retinopathy ... Dr Awuah Siaw, Director of Institutional Care Division of the Ghana Health Service (GHS), said the Service for the next five years would focus on cataract, trachoma, onchocerciasis, childhood blindness and refractive errors and low vision. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Brian O. L. Duke, 79; Worked to Combat River Blindness  Jul 3, 2006
    7 million people 99% in Africa remain infected with onchocerciasis, as river blindness is known. Of those, 500,000 are visually impaired and 270,000 are blind. (Los Angeles Times)

    TOPP clinic takes measures to combat Onchocerciasis  Jun 15, 2006
    Twifo-Ntafrewaso (C/R), June 14, GNA-Onchocerciasis, which was prevalent in the Twifo-Hemang-Lower-Denkyira district about three years ago but was combated through the vigilance of health personnel at the Twifo Oil Palm Plantation (TOPP) clinic, re-surfaced last year ... He said last year, 20 per cent of the people screened had the disease therefore, management of the clinic instituted measures including distribution of anti-Onchocerciasis drugs and educational campaigns in the communities to... (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Oncho-Free zone communities in Ghana get support  Jun 8, 2006
    Foe (UE/R) June 7, GNA - The Belgium government is supporting Fifteen communities each from Ghana and Burkina Faso in Onchocerciasis Zones to develop and improve their living standard ... The Socio-Economic Programme for the Trans Border Onchocerciasis Free-zone (OFZ) is supporting project 1 ... The Upper East Regional Minister, Mr Boniface Gambila, later inaugurated the Project Steering Committee (RPSC) for Trans Border Onchocerciasis Free Zone of Ghana and Burkina Faso. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Freemasons distance members from occultism  May 17, 2006
    The Lodge, he said, was also involved in health education lectures on hypertension, prostrate cancer and onchocerciasis. Mr Martin-Daniels said the 75th anniversary would be used to unveil the true story of Freemasonry to break the myth surrounding it. (Ghana Web, Ghana)

    Study Raises Hopes of Vaccine for River Blindness  Apr 28, 2006
    A study published this month has raised hopes of developing a vaccine against river blindness (onchocerciasis) -- a major disease in West and Central Africa as well as parts of Latin America ... Onchocerciasis has blinded about half a million people, according to the World Health Organization. (allAfrica.com)

    Scientists step closer to new treatments for River Blindness  Apr 14, 2006
    River Blindness, or Onchocerciasis, is caused by a parasitic worm and leads to severe itching of the skin and lesions of the eye which can result in blindness ... Professor Sandy Trees, at the University's Faculty of Veterinary Science, said: "Onchocerciasis has been the target of major international efforts to control and ultimately eradicate it, but it still presents a huge burden to health in many impoverished countries. To see if a vaccine is feasible for the disease we looked at whether... (EurekAlert!)


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