TY - JOUR KW - General Energy AU - Quilter EEV AU - Lockwood DNJ AU - Ruth Butlin C AB -

Objectives

We determined the male and female ratio of new leprosy cases detected over 15 years, allowing future exploration of inequalities pertaining to biological sex and social aspects of gender, which negatively impact women.

Methods

We extracted sex-disaggregated data from the annual Weekly Epidemiological Record (WER) Global leprosy situation reports, from 2004 to 2020, to determine the temporal pattern of new cases detected, by gender.

Results

Sex disaggregated leprosy data was only consistently reported in WER papers from 2004. The absolute number of female cases detected has remained static over the last 15 years (80,000–90,000 new cases annually). A 56.2% reduction in the number of male cases was observed from 2004–2019, whereas amongst females the reduction was only 37.5%. The difference in gender-specific reduction in case detection was similar in 5 of 6 WHO regions. There is a clear trend of increasing female percent amongst new cases detected from 2004 onwards; 30.8% of all new cases detected in 2004 were female, rising to 38.9% in 2019.

Conclusions

Sex-disaggregated data reporting at the national and international level needs to remain a priority. Further research is needed to understand why the percentage of new female cases detected amongst all new cases is increasing and the role biological factors play in leprosy transmission.

BT - Leprosy Review DO - 10.47276/lr.93.4.364 IS - 4 LA - Eng N2 -

Objectives

We determined the male and female ratio of new leprosy cases detected over 15 years, allowing future exploration of inequalities pertaining to biological sex and social aspects of gender, which negatively impact women.

Methods

We extracted sex-disaggregated data from the annual Weekly Epidemiological Record (WER) Global leprosy situation reports, from 2004 to 2020, to determine the temporal pattern of new cases detected, by gender.

Results

Sex disaggregated leprosy data was only consistently reported in WER papers from 2004. The absolute number of female cases detected has remained static over the last 15 years (80,000–90,000 new cases annually). A 56.2% reduction in the number of male cases was observed from 2004–2019, whereas amongst females the reduction was only 37.5%. The difference in gender-specific reduction in case detection was similar in 5 of 6 WHO regions. There is a clear trend of increasing female percent amongst new cases detected from 2004 onwards; 30.8% of all new cases detected in 2004 were female, rising to 38.9% in 2019.

Conclusions

Sex-disaggregated data reporting at the national and international level needs to remain a priority. Further research is needed to understand why the percentage of new female cases detected amongst all new cases is increasing and the role biological factors play in leprosy transmission.

PB - Lepra PY - 2022 SP - 364 EP - 369 T2 - Leprosy Review TI - Rising percentage of new female leprosy cases since 2004 UR - https://leprosyreview.org/admin/public/api/lepra/website/getDownload/6394536aafaac145ae6bd748 VL - 93 SN - 2162-8807 ER -