TY - JOUR
T1 - "Stopping the itch": mass drug administration for scabies outbreak control covered for over nine million people in Ethiopia
AU - Enbiale, Wendemagegn
AU - Baynie, Tariku Belachew
AU - Ayalew, Ashenafie
AU - Gebrehiwot, Tekilehayimanot
AU - Getanew, Tesfa
AU - Ayal, Alie
AU - Ayalew, Misganaw
AU - de Vries, Henry Jc
AU - Takarinda, Kuda
AU - Manzi, Marcel
AU - Zachriah, Rony
N1 - Funding Information: The program was funded by TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases and the Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp and supported by the various implementing partners. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2020 Enbiale et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/6/29
Y1 - 2020/6/29
N2 - INTRODUCTION: In 2018, the Ethiopian Ministry of Health embarked on a Mass Drug Administration (MDA) campaign that involved over 9 million people in Ethiopia - the largest scabies MDA campaign ever conducted on a global level. We describe its implementation and report on a) numbers screened and identified with scabies, b) treatment category and drug type and c) human resources used, duration, and cost of the campaign. METHODOLOGY: The MDA campaign was conducted according to national guidelines and activities including: planning and organization, engagement of local leaders, community mobilisation and advocacy, awareness-raising among health workers, field implementation, and monitoring and evaluation. The campaign was conducted between July and August 2018. RESULTS: The MDA campaign was implemented by about 15,000 people, mostly from the community, over an average of 6 days and reached 9, 057, 427 people. A total of 875,890 (9.7%) scabies cases were detected and 995,471 (11.0%) contacts received treatment. (Contact-to-case ratio = 1.3). Scabies prevalence varied, the highest prevalence was seen in Central Gondar (39.2%), South Gondar (16.7%) and North Gondar (15.0%), these neighbouring zones contributing more than two third of all scabies cases in the region. Of 1,738,304 (93%) who received treatment, 94% received ivermectin, the rest topical permethrin and sulfur. The average coverage capacity of an MDA campaign staff member was 84 people per day. The total cost was 11,696,333 United States Dollars (USD). Cost per 100,000 population = 129,135 USD. CONCLUSIONS: This experience of rapid-large scale implementation would be useful to scale up similar interventions and "stop the itch" in other regions of Ethiopia.
AB - INTRODUCTION: In 2018, the Ethiopian Ministry of Health embarked on a Mass Drug Administration (MDA) campaign that involved over 9 million people in Ethiopia - the largest scabies MDA campaign ever conducted on a global level. We describe its implementation and report on a) numbers screened and identified with scabies, b) treatment category and drug type and c) human resources used, duration, and cost of the campaign. METHODOLOGY: The MDA campaign was conducted according to national guidelines and activities including: planning and organization, engagement of local leaders, community mobilisation and advocacy, awareness-raising among health workers, field implementation, and monitoring and evaluation. The campaign was conducted between July and August 2018. RESULTS: The MDA campaign was implemented by about 15,000 people, mostly from the community, over an average of 6 days and reached 9, 057, 427 people. A total of 875,890 (9.7%) scabies cases were detected and 995,471 (11.0%) contacts received treatment. (Contact-to-case ratio = 1.3). Scabies prevalence varied, the highest prevalence was seen in Central Gondar (39.2%), South Gondar (16.7%) and North Gondar (15.0%), these neighbouring zones contributing more than two third of all scabies cases in the region. Of 1,738,304 (93%) who received treatment, 94% received ivermectin, the rest topical permethrin and sulfur. The average coverage capacity of an MDA campaign staff member was 84 people per day. The total cost was 11,696,333 United States Dollars (USD). Cost per 100,000 population = 129,135 USD. CONCLUSIONS: This experience of rapid-large scale implementation would be useful to scale up similar interventions and "stop the itch" in other regions of Ethiopia.
KW - Community health workers, mass drug administration
KW - Operational research
KW - Population-based prevalence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087612027&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.11701
DO - https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.11701
M3 - Review article
C2 - 32614793
SN - 1972-2680
VL - 14
SP - 28S-35S
JO - Journal of infection in developing countries
JF - Journal of infection in developing countries
IS - 61
ER -