Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions

Sleeping sickness is a parasitic, vector-borne disease, carried by the tsetse fly and prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease continues to pose a public health burden in Uganda, which experienced a widespread outbreak in 1900-1920, and a more recent outbreak in 1976-1989. The disease continues to spread to uninfected districts. This paper compares the spatial distributions of sleeping in Uganda for the 1900-1920 outbreak period with current disease foci, and discusses information gaps and implications arising for future research, prevention and control. Population census records for 1911 and sleeping sickness records from Medical and Sanitary Reports of the Ugandan Protectorate for 1905-1936 were extracted from the Uganda Archives. Current sleeping sickness distribution data were provided by the Ministry of Health, Uganda. These were used to develop sleeping sickness distribution maps for comparison between the early 1900s and the early 2000s. The distribution of sleeping sickness from 1905-1920 shows notable differences compared to the current distribution of disease. In particular, archival cases were recorded in south-west and central Uganda, areas currently free of disease. The disease focus has moved from lakeshore Buganda (1905-1920) to the Busoga and south-east districts. Archival sleeping sickness distributions indicate the potential for a much wider area of disease risk than indicated by current disease foci. This is compounded by an absence of tsetse distribution data, continued political instability in north-central Uganda, continued spread of disease into new districts, and evidence of the role of livestock movements in spreading the parasite. These results support concerns as to the potential mergence of the two disease foci in the south-east and north-west of the country.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Berrang-Ford, Lea, Odiit, M., Maiso, F., Waltner-Toews, D., McDermott, John J.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Mary Ann Liebert Inc 2010-12
Subjects:trypanosomiasis, spatial distribution, geographical distribution, human population, glossinidae, vectors, disease control, epidemics,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29981
https://doi.org/10.1089/vbz.2008.0196
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-299812023-09-12T12:16:26Z Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions Berrang-Ford, Lea Odiit, M. Maiso, F. Waltner-Toews, D. McDermott, John J. trypanosomiasis spatial distribution geographical distribution human population glossinidae vectors disease control epidemics Sleeping sickness is a parasitic, vector-borne disease, carried by the tsetse fly and prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease continues to pose a public health burden in Uganda, which experienced a widespread outbreak in 1900-1920, and a more recent outbreak in 1976-1989. The disease continues to spread to uninfected districts. This paper compares the spatial distributions of sleeping in Uganda for the 1900-1920 outbreak period with current disease foci, and discusses information gaps and implications arising for future research, prevention and control. Population census records for 1911 and sleeping sickness records from Medical and Sanitary Reports of the Ugandan Protectorate for 1905-1936 were extracted from the Uganda Archives. Current sleeping sickness distribution data were provided by the Ministry of Health, Uganda. These were used to develop sleeping sickness distribution maps for comparison between the early 1900s and the early 2000s. The distribution of sleeping sickness from 1905-1920 shows notable differences compared to the current distribution of disease. In particular, archival cases were recorded in south-west and central Uganda, areas currently free of disease. The disease focus has moved from lakeshore Buganda (1905-1920) to the Busoga and south-east districts. Archival sleeping sickness distributions indicate the potential for a much wider area of disease risk than indicated by current disease foci. This is compounded by an absence of tsetse distribution data, continued political instability in north-central Uganda, continued spread of disease into new districts, and evidence of the role of livestock movements in spreading the parasite. These results support concerns as to the potential mergence of the two disease foci in the south-east and north-west of the country. 2010-12 2013-06-11T09:25:41Z 2013-06-11T09:25:41Z Journal Article African Health Sciences;6(4): 223-231 1680-6905 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29981 https://doi.org/10.1089/vbz.2008.0196 en Copyrighted; all rights reserved Open Access p. 977-988 Mary Ann Liebert Inc African Health Sciences
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic trypanosomiasis
spatial distribution
geographical distribution
human population
glossinidae
vectors
disease control
epidemics
trypanosomiasis
spatial distribution
geographical distribution
human population
glossinidae
vectors
disease control
epidemics
spellingShingle trypanosomiasis
spatial distribution
geographical distribution
human population
glossinidae
vectors
disease control
epidemics
trypanosomiasis
spatial distribution
geographical distribution
human population
glossinidae
vectors
disease control
epidemics
Berrang-Ford, Lea
Odiit, M.
Maiso, F.
Waltner-Toews, D.
McDermott, John J.
Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
description Sleeping sickness is a parasitic, vector-borne disease, carried by the tsetse fly and prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease continues to pose a public health burden in Uganda, which experienced a widespread outbreak in 1900-1920, and a more recent outbreak in 1976-1989. The disease continues to spread to uninfected districts. This paper compares the spatial distributions of sleeping in Uganda for the 1900-1920 outbreak period with current disease foci, and discusses information gaps and implications arising for future research, prevention and control. Population census records for 1911 and sleeping sickness records from Medical and Sanitary Reports of the Ugandan Protectorate for 1905-1936 were extracted from the Uganda Archives. Current sleeping sickness distribution data were provided by the Ministry of Health, Uganda. These were used to develop sleeping sickness distribution maps for comparison between the early 1900s and the early 2000s. The distribution of sleeping sickness from 1905-1920 shows notable differences compared to the current distribution of disease. In particular, archival cases were recorded in south-west and central Uganda, areas currently free of disease. The disease focus has moved from lakeshore Buganda (1905-1920) to the Busoga and south-east districts. Archival sleeping sickness distributions indicate the potential for a much wider area of disease risk than indicated by current disease foci. This is compounded by an absence of tsetse distribution data, continued political instability in north-central Uganda, continued spread of disease into new districts, and evidence of the role of livestock movements in spreading the parasite. These results support concerns as to the potential mergence of the two disease foci in the south-east and north-west of the country.
format Journal Article
topic_facet trypanosomiasis
spatial distribution
geographical distribution
human population
glossinidae
vectors
disease control
epidemics
author Berrang-Ford, Lea
Odiit, M.
Maiso, F.
Waltner-Toews, D.
McDermott, John J.
author_facet Berrang-Ford, Lea
Odiit, M.
Maiso, F.
Waltner-Toews, D.
McDermott, John J.
author_sort Berrang-Ford, Lea
title Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
title_short Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
title_full Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
title_fullStr Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
title_full_unstemmed Sleeping sickness in Uganda: Revisiting current and historical distributions
title_sort sleeping sickness in uganda: revisiting current and historical distributions
publisher Mary Ann Liebert Inc
publishDate 2010-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29981
https://doi.org/10.1089/vbz.2008.0196
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