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Volume 20, Number 6—June 2014
Research

Short-Term Malaria Reduction by Single-Dose Azithromycin during Mass Drug Administration for Trachoma, Tanzania

Stephen E. Schachterle1, George Mtove, Joshua P. Levens, Emily Clemens, Lirong Shi, Amrita Raj, J. Stephen Dumler, Beatriz Munoz, Shelia West, and David J. SullivanComments to Author 
Author affiliations: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (S.E. Schachterle, L. Shi, A. Raj, D.J. Sullivan); National Institute for Medical Research, Ubwari, Tanzania (G. Mtove); Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore (J.P. Levens, E. Clemens, J.S. Dumler, B. Munoz, S. West)

Main Article

Figure 1

Flowchart of participants in study of short-term malaria reduction by single-dose azithromycin (AZT) during mass drug administration (MDA) for trachoma, Tanzania, January 12–July 21, 2009. AZT MDA (village-wide) and study panels show that 90% of persons who were intended to receive AZT received this drug. Total study participants with ≈1,000 in each group, shown in the study panel, contributed samples that are shown in the real-time PCR panel at each sampling time. Percentages in the real-time P

Figure 1. Flowchart of participants in study of short-term malaria reduction by single-dose azithromycin (AZT) during mass drug administration (MDA) for trachoma, Tanzania, January 12–July 21, 2009AZT MDA (village-wide) and study panels show that 90% of persons who were intended to receive AZT received this drugTotal study participants with ≈1,000 in each group, shown in the study panel, contributed samples that are shown in the real-time PCR panel at each sampling timePercentages in the real-time PCR panel used values from the study panel as the denominator.

Main Article

1Current affiliation: Pfizer, Inc., New York, New York, USA.

Page created: May 16, 2014
Page updated: May 16, 2014
Page reviewed: May 16, 2014
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