TY - JOUR KW - Adolescent KW - Adult KW - Age Distribution KW - Aged KW - Child KW - Child, Preschool KW - Communicable Disease Control KW - Developing countries KW - Ethiopia KW - Female KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Middle Aged KW - National Health Programs KW - Prevalence KW - Program Development KW - Program evaluation KW - Risk Assessment KW - Sex Distribution AU - Groenen G AB -

From 1979 to 1999, the ALERT leprosy control programme has covered a well-defined area in central Ethiopia using standardized case finding strategies. During this period, the leprosy prevalence has decreased more than 30-fold, there has been a 3-fold decrease in case detection and a 6-fold decrease in the case detection rate. The proportion of MB patients among new cases increased by around 80% and the proportion of children among new cases decreased by around 60%. Several factors may have contributed to these trends. The impact of the introduction of MDT and the shortening of the duration of the MB regimen are shown, but other factors are also discussed at length: an increase in the population of the area, cleaning up of the registers, changing case definitions, changes in staff motivation and fluctuations, even small ones, in case finding intensity and coverage. Do the observed trends reflect a reduction in the transmission of the leprosy infection? Because of the many confounding factors, it would be difficult to answer that question positively at present. Additional rigorous data collection and analysis is required.

BT - Leprosy review C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11969124?dopt=Abstract CN - Infolep Library - available DA - 2002 Mar IS - 1 J2 - Lepr Rev LA - eng N2 -

From 1979 to 1999, the ALERT leprosy control programme has covered a well-defined area in central Ethiopia using standardized case finding strategies. During this period, the leprosy prevalence has decreased more than 30-fold, there has been a 3-fold decrease in case detection and a 6-fold decrease in the case detection rate. The proportion of MB patients among new cases increased by around 80% and the proportion of children among new cases decreased by around 60%. Several factors may have contributed to these trends. The impact of the introduction of MDT and the shortening of the duration of the MB regimen are shown, but other factors are also discussed at length: an increase in the population of the area, cleaning up of the registers, changing case definitions, changes in staff motivation and fluctuations, even small ones, in case finding intensity and coverage. Do the observed trends reflect a reduction in the transmission of the leprosy infection? Because of the many confounding factors, it would be difficult to answer that question positively at present. Additional rigorous data collection and analysis is required.

PY - 2002 SP - 29 EP - 40 T2 - Leprosy review TI - Trends in prevalence and case finding in the ALERT leprosy control programme, 1979-1999. UR - https://leprosyreview.org/article/73/1/00-0005 VL - 73 SN - 0305-7518 ER -