TY - JOUR KW - Bangladesh KW - Developing countries KW - Follow-Up Studies KW - Humans KW - Leprostatic Agents KW - leprosy KW - Peripheral Nervous System Diseases KW - Population Surveillance KW - Program evaluation AU - Croft R P AB -

In this paper, active surveillance is compared with self-reporting as a method of detecting new nerve function loss in leprosy patients who have completed multidrug therapy (MDT). Five hundred and three patients were selected according to new surveillance guidelines in one part of the Danish-Bangladesh Leprosy Mission leprosy control project working area. Surveillance coverage of 71% was achieved in a 7-month period. During this time, 10 released-from-treatment (RFT) patients from among the study group were found to have acute nerve damage requiring prednisolone treatment. Out of the 10, only 2 were detected actively; the remaining 8 self-reported. It is concluded that health education given at RFT time is effective in motivating patients to self-report with acute nerve damage, and that the time spent on active surveillance could have been better used in other activities, i.e., case detection. As a result of these findings, active surveillance has been abandoned in the leprosy control project.

BT - Leprosy review C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8684254?dopt=Abstract CN - Infolep Library - available DA - 1996 Jun DO - 10.5935/0305-7518.19960014 IS - 2 J2 - Lepr Rev LA - eng N2 -

In this paper, active surveillance is compared with self-reporting as a method of detecting new nerve function loss in leprosy patients who have completed multidrug therapy (MDT). Five hundred and three patients were selected according to new surveillance guidelines in one part of the Danish-Bangladesh Leprosy Mission leprosy control project working area. Surveillance coverage of 71% was achieved in a 7-month period. During this time, 10 released-from-treatment (RFT) patients from among the study group were found to have acute nerve damage requiring prednisolone treatment. Out of the 10, only 2 were detected actively; the remaining 8 self-reported. It is concluded that health education given at RFT time is effective in motivating patients to self-report with acute nerve damage, and that the time spent on active surveillance could have been better used in other activities, i.e., case detection. As a result of these findings, active surveillance has been abandoned in the leprosy control project.

PY - 1996 SP - 135 EP - 40 T2 - Leprosy review TI - Active surveillance in leprosy: how useful is it? UR - http://leprev.ilsl.br/pdfs/1996/v67n2/pdf/v67n2a06.pdf VL - 67 SN - 0305-7518 ER -