The World Health Organization (WHO) is expected to give a
verification on China's elimination of filariasis in September,
said a Chinese health official in Beijing Monday.
China has suggested the WHO send a team to re-examine the
regions which have reached the criteria of filariasis elimination,
Hao Yang, deputy director of the Department of Disease Prevention
and Control of the Ministry of Health, told Xinhua in an
interview.
"If confirmed by the WHO, China will be the first country in the
world to lower the transmission rate to less than one percent for
at least five years, which is the WHO's criteria for filariasis
elimination," said Hao, who was just back from a meeting held in
Fiji by the Global Alliance to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis.
China submitted at the meeting its application for the
verification to the WHO, which in 1997 vowed to eliminate
filariasis around the globe by 2020.
Lymphatic filariasis, which causes severe and debilitating
swelling, particularly of the limbs, is caused by filarial
parasites. The parasites are transmitted to humans by mosquitoes.
The adult parasites lodge in the lymphatic vessels where they cause
inflammation, blocking the vessels.
This blocks drainage of fluid from the limb, causing massive
swelling which is usually progressive and permanent. However, both
chronic disease and transmission can be prevented if infection is
treated early.
According to the WHO, about 1.1 billion people are at risk of
infection of the disease, with an estimated 120 million people
infected, the majority of which are in Asia and the Pacific
region.
China has 16 endemic provinces of filariasis with a total
population of 341 million people at risk. People who were infected
with the disease were often said to have "elephant legs", which
refer to elephantiasis, another name commonly known for
filariasis.
All the 864 endemic counties and cities reached the criteria for
basic elimination by 1994, according to Hao.
The Chinese government has been working hard in controlling
filariasis since the 1950s. People in the endemic regions were
provided salt mixed with DEC, a drug for preventing filariasis,
from 1970 to 1990, and got effective results, the official
said.
"The success of China ... is proof that elimination of lymphatic
filariasis is possible if given the necessary levels of political
support, adequate funding and public commitment," said Dr Shigeru
Omi, WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific, at the meeting
in Fiji.
In the future, China will continue surveillance of the disease
throughout the country and strengthen prevention of filariasis
cases from other countries, said Hao.
The Republic of Korea is expected to be the second country to
achieve elimination of the disease, according to the meeting.
(Xinhua News Agency April 4, 2006)
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