Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines

In the Philippines, ten NTDs are prevalent, but only six namely LF, schistosomiasis, STH, food-borne trematodiases, rabies and leprosy are considered to be of public health importance. The 81 provinces in the country are endemic for at least one of these NTDs. Others may be endemic for two or even m...

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Main Authors: Leonardo, Lydia R, Hernandez, Leda, Magturo, Theodora Cecile, Palasi, Winston, Rubite, Julie Mart, de Cadiz, Aleyla, Moendeg, Kharleezelle J, Fornillos, Raffy Jay, Tabios, Ian Kim B, Mistica, Myra, Fontanilla, Ian Kendrich C
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2019
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/biology-faculty-pubs/31
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001706X19309015?casa_token=Bgyc1h6th8gAAAAA:ia2XWan0tcciQyUZ6V8tuBo1_YmkCz7wMFef20SQzR--qrxJw-UzZxoV-j6EPM64CRCpWrTt0f4
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.biology-faculty-pubs-10332020-04-15T07:30:47Z Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines Leonardo, Lydia R Hernandez, Leda Magturo, Theodora Cecile Palasi, Winston Rubite, Julie Mart de Cadiz, Aleyla Moendeg, Kharleezelle J Fornillos, Raffy Jay Tabios, Ian Kim B Mistica, Myra Fontanilla, Ian Kendrich C In the Philippines, ten NTDs are prevalent, but only six namely LF, schistosomiasis, STH, food-borne trematodiases, rabies and leprosy are considered to be of public health importance. The 81 provinces in the country are endemic for at least one of these NTDs. Others may be endemic for two or even more of these diseases. Since 2000, after the Philippines accepted and implemented the WHO guidelines for NTDs prevention, control and elimination, significant progress has been achieved in reducing the magnitude of NTDs endemic in the country. Since 2009, out of 46 filariasis-endemic provinces, the number of provinces that has eliminated LF has progressively increased so that by 2015, 76% are already LF-free. By 2019, only four provinces remain endemic for LF. For schistosomiasis, as of 2012, report from the Department of Health (DOH) put the number of high endemic provinces at 10, moderately endemic at 6 and low to elimination levels at 12. For STH, results of the National Parasite Survey in the Philippines among school-aged children conducted in 2015 by the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, the research arm of the Philippine DOH, however, showed that the overall cumulative prevalence was 28.4% with a prevalence range between 7.1% and 67.4%. The figures are way above the <20% prevalence standard set by the World Health Organization. Control and prevention efforts for FBTs just gained traction with the call of WHO for elimination of NTDs in 2015. There is an urgent need to update information by an intensive national baseline survey that can validate previous data as well as generate new information on the magnitude of the FBT problem in the Philippines. For leprosy, elimination activities have been intensified in high prevalence areas and from 2009 to 2013, case detection and prevalence were sustained at <1.0 per 10,000 population. Rabies elimination activities have been effective that by 2011, only five regions out of 16 remained with the highest number of rabies cases. In a period of seven years from 2010 to 2017, the number of rabies-free provinces and municipalities increased from 3 to 49. Problems continue to hound the NTD programmes in the Philippines as priorities shift to more urgent health problems in a country that is weighed down not only by the triple burden of disease but serious health consequences of emergencies and disasters and the fast-growing population itself. Paradigm shifts are suggested to replace the traditional and conventional perspectives of control. These include change from disease approach to intervention approach to allow for integration of strategies targeting several NTDs and multisectoral, multidisciplinary approach requiring strong, viable and sustainable partnerships involving various agencies of the government, public and private sector, pharmaceuticals, academe, researchers, local government units and the endemic communities themselves. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/biology-faculty-pubs/31 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001706X19309015?casa_token=Bgyc1h6th8gAAAAA:ia2XWan0tcciQyUZ6V8tuBo1_YmkCz7wMFef20SQzR--qrxJw-UzZxoV-j6EPM64CRCpWrTt0f4 Biology Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Biology Parasitic Diseases
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Biology
Parasitic Diseases
spellingShingle Biology
Parasitic Diseases
Leonardo, Lydia R
Hernandez, Leda
Magturo, Theodora Cecile
Palasi, Winston
Rubite, Julie Mart
de Cadiz, Aleyla
Moendeg, Kharleezelle J
Fornillos, Raffy Jay
Tabios, Ian Kim B
Mistica, Myra
Fontanilla, Ian Kendrich C
Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
description In the Philippines, ten NTDs are prevalent, but only six namely LF, schistosomiasis, STH, food-borne trematodiases, rabies and leprosy are considered to be of public health importance. The 81 provinces in the country are endemic for at least one of these NTDs. Others may be endemic for two or even more of these diseases. Since 2000, after the Philippines accepted and implemented the WHO guidelines for NTDs prevention, control and elimination, significant progress has been achieved in reducing the magnitude of NTDs endemic in the country. Since 2009, out of 46 filariasis-endemic provinces, the number of provinces that has eliminated LF has progressively increased so that by 2015, 76% are already LF-free. By 2019, only four provinces remain endemic for LF. For schistosomiasis, as of 2012, report from the Department of Health (DOH) put the number of high endemic provinces at 10, moderately endemic at 6 and low to elimination levels at 12. For STH, results of the National Parasite Survey in the Philippines among school-aged children conducted in 2015 by the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, the research arm of the Philippine DOH, however, showed that the overall cumulative prevalence was 28.4% with a prevalence range between 7.1% and 67.4%. The figures are way above the <20% prevalence standard set by the World Health Organization. Control and prevention efforts for FBTs just gained traction with the call of WHO for elimination of NTDs in 2015. There is an urgent need to update information by an intensive national baseline survey that can validate previous data as well as generate new information on the magnitude of the FBT problem in the Philippines. For leprosy, elimination activities have been intensified in high prevalence areas and from 2009 to 2013, case detection and prevalence were sustained at <1.0 per 10,000 population. Rabies elimination activities have been effective that by 2011, only five regions out of 16 remained with the highest number of rabies cases. In a period of seven years from 2010 to 2017, the number of rabies-free provinces and municipalities increased from 3 to 49. Problems continue to hound the NTD programmes in the Philippines as priorities shift to more urgent health problems in a country that is weighed down not only by the triple burden of disease but serious health consequences of emergencies and disasters and the fast-growing population itself. Paradigm shifts are suggested to replace the traditional and conventional perspectives of control. These include change from disease approach to intervention approach to allow for integration of strategies targeting several NTDs and multisectoral, multidisciplinary approach requiring strong, viable and sustainable partnerships involving various agencies of the government, public and private sector, pharmaceuticals, academe, researchers, local government units and the endemic communities themselves.
format text
author Leonardo, Lydia R
Hernandez, Leda
Magturo, Theodora Cecile
Palasi, Winston
Rubite, Julie Mart
de Cadiz, Aleyla
Moendeg, Kharleezelle J
Fornillos, Raffy Jay
Tabios, Ian Kim B
Mistica, Myra
Fontanilla, Ian Kendrich C
author_facet Leonardo, Lydia R
Hernandez, Leda
Magturo, Theodora Cecile
Palasi, Winston
Rubite, Julie Mart
de Cadiz, Aleyla
Moendeg, Kharleezelle J
Fornillos, Raffy Jay
Tabios, Ian Kim B
Mistica, Myra
Fontanilla, Ian Kendrich C
author_sort Leonardo, Lydia R
title Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
title_short Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
title_full Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
title_fullStr Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Current status of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Philippines
title_sort current status of neglected tropical diseases (ntds) in the philippines
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2019
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/biology-faculty-pubs/31
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001706X19309015?casa_token=Bgyc1h6th8gAAAAA:ia2XWan0tcciQyUZ6V8tuBo1_YmkCz7wMFef20SQzR--qrxJw-UzZxoV-j6EPM64CRCpWrTt0f4
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