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Funding crisis threatens Africa’s war on neglected tropical diseases, says WHO

Experts say the diseases affect nearly 400 million people in the region.

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by agatha Ngotho

Counties31 August 2023 - 18:00
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In Summary


  • • Forty-two African countries have been certified free of Guinea worm.
  • • Six countries in the African region have eliminated trachoma as a public health problem.
Narok county eyecare coordinator Lekuye Rostan gives trachoma medicine to residents at Oloposimorum village, Narok West, near the Kenya- Tanzania border on Tuesday, July 12, 2022.

Experts have warned that continued underfunding poses a risk to the fight to control and eliminate neglected tropical diseases.

Health experts and donors meeting for the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Committee for Africa have called for increased investments to end the neglected illnesses.

They said the diseases affect nearly 400 million people in the region.

According to a 2022 survey by WHO Africa’s Expanded Special Project for Elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases, around 99 million people in 26 African countries are at risk of missing out on treatment for diseases. 

The survey attributed this to insufficient funds for mass drug administration.

WHO says neglected tropical diseases are a set of 20 diseases or disease groups that occur predominantly in tropical and subtropical areas.

They include lymphatic filariasis, more commonly known as elephantiasis, onchocerciasis or river blindness, schistosomiasis or bilharzia, as well as human African trypanosomiasis often called sleeping sickness, chronic ulcers and other skin infections.

The Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) says neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are a group of chronic disabling infections affecting more than one billion people worldwide.

This is mainly in Africa and mostly those living in remote rural areas, urban slums or conflict zones. 

Beyond their negative impact on health, NTDs contribute to an ongoing cycle of poverty and stigma that leaves people unable to work, go to school or participate fully in family and or community life.

WHO Regional Director for Africa Dr Matshidiso Moeti said these diseases can be devastating, including causing severe pain, disabilities and deformities, malnutrition, stunted growth and cognitive impairment.

Anaemia caused by some of these diseases has a direct impact on maternal mortality.

She said despite the challenges, Africa has made significant progress in the fight against neglected tropical diseases.

Leprosy has all but been eliminated as a public health problem, with only Comoros yet to achieve the elimination goal in one of its three islands.

Forty-two African countries have been certified free of Guinea worm. Six countries in the African region have eliminated trachoma as a public health problem.

In 2022, Togo became the first African country to eliminate four neglected tropical diseases.

“Africa has made great strides against neglected tropical diseases, with millions of people now living free of the pain and suffering caused by these illnesses," Moeti said.

"But to secure and build upon these gains, further investments, including adequate, predictable and sustained funding are crucial to speed up the pace towards ending these diseases.” 

The economic cost of neglected tropical diseases is high for affected families.

She said household income lost due to out-of-pocket health expenditures and wages lost due to these diseases is estimated to be at least US$33 billion per year. 

Prevention and treatment of neglected tropical diseases count among the high-return public health investments, with an estimated net benefit to affected individuals of about US$25 for every US$1 invested.

Moeti said measures to address these diseases have ripple effects in communities, including better education, health and employment outcomes.

In addition, many neglected tropical diseases control measures also rely on simple interventions that can be carried out by non-specialists, making community-based delivery possible.

The WHO global Neglected Tropical Disease global roadmap 2021-2030 seeks to reduce by 90 per cent the number of people requiring treatment for these diseases and reduce associated disability by 75 per cent.

The roadmap, endorsed through the African Regional Framework for the control, eradication and elimination of tropical and vector borne diseases, encourages governments to provide leadership and commit to the achievement of global and national targets.

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