Volume 26, Number 5—May 2020
Synopsis
Surveillance of Leprosy in Kiribati, 1935–2017
Abstract
In Kiribati, unlike most countries, high and increasing numbers of cases of leprosy have been reported despite the availability of multidrug therapy and efforts to improve case finding and management. Historic records show that 28 cases had been identified by 1925. A systematic population survey in 1997 identified 135 new cases; the mean incidence rate for 1993–1997 was 7.4/10,000 population. After administering mass chemoprophylaxis, the country reached the elimination threshold (prevalence <1/10,000), but case numbers have rebounded. The mean annualized rate of new cases in 2013–2017 was 15/10,000 population, with the highest new case rates (>20/10,000 population) in the main population centers of South Tarawa and Betio. Spread is expected to continue in areas where crowding and poor socioeconomic conditions persist and may accelerate as sea levels rise from climate change. New initiatives to improve social conditions are needed, and efforts such as postexposure chemoprophylaxis should be implemented to prevent spread.
Leprosy (also called Hansen’s disease) was well established in Kiribati by the early 20th century, possibly as a result of contact with Western and Chinese traders (1,2). Colonial records indicate that there were 28 known cases in 1925, when the population was ≈31,000. Kiribati, formerly the Gilbert Islands, is a country of 33 atolls, 21 of which are inhabited, spread over >1 million square miles of ocean. The country covers an area on both sides of the International Date Line and north and south of the equator. The islands became a British colony in 1916, were occupied by Japan during 1942–1943, and became an independent country in 1979. The population in the 2015 census was 110,136, with the main population located in South Tarawa (39,058 persons) and Betio (17,330 persons) (3). Betio, an islet with a deepwater port, is connected to South Tarawa by a causeway.
Leprosy, caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae, is a chronic disease with an indolent onset, resulting in a long period between the manifestation of the disease and the person seeking healthcare (4). Its 2 clinical forms, paucibacillary disease (PB) and multibacillary disease (MB), may have long-term consequences if untreated and can result in peripheral nerve damage, chronic ulceration, blindness, and facial disfigurement, as well as social isolation and family discord. Complications are more common in MB leprosy (5,6).
Humans are the main reservoir of M. leprae. The primary mode of transmission is understood to be person to person by the respiratory route, but this route has not been proven conclusively (7). Patients with MB disease excrete M. leprae from their nasal mucosa and skin. Persons most at risk are close household contacts of those with MB, but social contacts are also at risk. Social and economic factors play a role in transmission (8). Poverty, undernutrition, crowding, and rapid uncontrolled internal migration have been associated with high rates of leprosy (9). Higher rates of leprosy were found in households of >7 persons than those with <4 persons and in homes in which >2 shared a bedroom (10,11).
The First International Leprosy Conference, held in Berlin in 1897, adopted segregation as the global response to the threat of leprosy; it was commonly used by colonial governments (12). Newly diagnosed patients with leprosy were initially isolated in Kiribati before they were transported to the leprosy isolation island, Makogai, in the Fijian archipelago. Patients from Kiribati were first admitted to Makogai in 1937, although the isolation facility began accepting patients by 1911. Dapsone, the first effective drug to treat leprosy, became available in 1945 and enabled patients on Makogai to be treated and repatriated. The leprosy isolation facility was closed in 1969. Multidrug therapy (MDT) consisting of rifampin, dapsone, and clofazamine was successfully introduced to Kiribati by 1990 (13).
Optimism about the efficacy of MDT and evidence of leprosy control led the 44th World Health Assembly to adopt resolution WHA44.9 in May 1991 to eliminate leprosy as a public health problem by the year 2000 (14). The elimination target was defined as a prevalence of <1 case/10,000 population. For calculating prevalence, cases were defined as patients registered for MDT treatment, which reflected the burden of disease. Concern that Kiribati would not meet the elimination goal was raised in 1996 when leprosy was found to be highly endemic to Kiribati, and mass screening of the whole population was conducted in 1997 and repeated in 1998, supported by the World Health Organization (15). Chemoprophylaxis (single-dose rifampicin, ofloxacin, and minocycline) was administered to the population of South Tarawa, including Betio, and Christmas Island (15). Reported cases fell following this intervention, and Kiribati reached the elimination goal in 2000 (prevalence 0.94 cases/10,000 population). However, prevalence has since rebounded above elimination levels, with high numbers of new cases among children, a marker of transmission (16). Leprosy has also been identified among Kiribati nationals who have moved to neighboring countries including the Solomon Islands, Fiji, and New Zealand (4). Leprosy control is recognized as a priority by the Government of Kiribati (17). We describe the rates of new cases of leprosy from historic and recent medical records to document emergence and transmission of leprosy in Kiribati.
We aimed to use the most reliable surveillance data sources available for this study. One source was the records of patients admitted to Makogai isolation island in Fiji. Patients with presumed leprosy were identified in Kiribati and sent to Makogai, where a leprologist examined them and validated the diagnosis. Those with leprosy were then interned on Makogai. After the isolation facility was closed, the case records of all patients were transported to the Patrick Twomey Memorial Leprosy Hospital in Suva, Fiji, where they were stored and later entered into an electronic database.
A second source of information was the medical records of the National Leprosy Unit of Kiribati, which is located in the only secondary medical facility in Kiribati. All cases of leprosy in Kiribati are referred to this center, which is responsible for validating cases, reviewing complex cases, and ensuring medication is sent to patients across the country and which maintains clinical records.
Population Statistics
We obtained population statistics on numbers and crowding from census data available online for 2005, 2010, and 2015, and in hard copy for 1990 and 2000, from the national statistics office under the Ministry of Finance of the Government of Kiribati and the World Bank (3,18). We obtained national income from the World Bank figures in current US dollars.
Case Definition
A case of leprosy is defined as illness in a person who has >1 features and who has not completed a full course of treatment. The features are the following: hypopigmented or reddish lesions with definite loss of skin sensation; involvement of peripheral nerves, as demonstrated by definite thickening with definite loss of skin sensation; and detection of acid-fast bacilli in the skin by biopsy or slit skin smear (19). Cases were classified into PB disease and MB disease in accordance with WHO criteria. Grade 2 disability was defined as visible deformity or damage present in the hands or feet or severe visual impairment (vision worse than 6/60; inability to count fingers at 6 m; lagophthalmos, iridocyclitis, or corneal opacities) (19,20).
Record Sources
We (J.B.) compiled, checked, and locked an electronic database from the medical records of case-patients from Kiribati admitted to Makogai (1935–1964). The records have been held at the Twomey Leprosy Hospital in Suva, Fiji, by the Pacific Leprosy Foundation (PLF), a nonprofit organization that supports leprosy prevention, treatment, and patient welfare work around the Pacific, working in partnership with the Ministries of Health under a memorandum of understanding.
We obtained the case registers from the National Leprosy Unit (NLU) at the Nawerewere hospital in Kiribati and entered information on cases from 1988–2010 into a separate database. We (S.T.C.) checked the accuracy of data entry (90%). In 2010, staff at the NLU began entering data prospectively. We backed up this database to cloud-based storage weekly, and the PLF checked for completeness, double entries, and other errors. In addition, PLF staff review the data on regular site visits. These records are the source documents for WHO reports.
To diagnose leprosy, the medical and nursing staff of the NLU perform clinical examination of patients in North and South Tarawa in person, and by radio consultation with medical assistants and nurses on the outer islands. In 1997–1998, all cases were seen and validated by leprologists involved in a nationwide screening program that covered 92.2% of the population (15). In 2007–2017, a consultant leprologist supported by the PLF validated cases during regular visits.
Intensification of Case Finding
Because of concern that the number of new cases was increasing, we intensified the control program beginning in 2008. A consultant leprologist (A.C.) visited Kiribati every 3–4 months and conducted regular educational workshops for medical assistants, nurses, and staff in the NLU.
We introduced active case finding for 1 year in 2010, followed by ongoing publicity campaigns that included visits to village meeting houses by drama groups, radio advertising, and a song recorded by a local musician. Since 2015, health promotion activities have been intensified; we held free dermatology clinics in areas of apparent high leprosy case load in South Tarawa and Betio. Active screening of household contacts of leprosy patients began in 2016.
Statistical Methods
We performed statistical analyses using Microsoft Excel (Microsoft, https://www.microsoft.com) and R statistical software (21). We summarized cases by year, age, and clinical form. We calculated crude rates with 95% Wilson binomial CIs by dividing counts by the population estimates obtained from the World Bank. We standardized rates by age, using 5-year categories, to the WHO’s world 2000–2025 population. We estimated incidence rate ratios comparing age and sex, stratified by clinical form and adjusting for year, using Poisson regression models.
Ethics Considerations
The Ministry of Health and Medical Services in Kiribati approved the study design. The ethics committee of the University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand, approved the study.
Population of Kiribati
Kiribati has been experiencing rapid population growth and increasing concentration of people in South Tarawa and Betio, where the percentage of the population rose from 5% in 1947 to 51% in 2015 (Table 1) (3,18). We observed a corresponding increase in population density, but numbers per household were relatively stable over time (Table 2). The number of occupants per household was higher in South Tarawa and Betio than the outer islands of Kiribati. GDP per capita increased 300% between 1990 and 2015, but from a very low base (from US $550 to US $1,648; current dollars, World Bank data) (18).
Cases from Makogai Case Register
The database recorded 236 patients admitted to Makogai with leprosy. Of these, 87 were admitted during 1935–1940; another 5 during 1942–1946, during and immediately after World War II; and 141 during 1947–1954. The last 4 patients were admitted during 1956–1964, before admissions were stopped. Of the 236 cases, 67 were classified as cutaneous/tuberculoid, 121 as lepromatous, 47 as neural leprosy, and 1 as indeterminate. The Kiribati population was relatively stable from 1931–1947 at ≈30,000 persons, giving an annual new case rate of 3.9/10,000 population.
Cases from the National Leprosy Unit Case Register, 1988−2017
No case records were archived before 1988. During 1988–2017, a total of 2,287 new cases were reported in Kiribati, 1,242 (54%) of which were in male patients. A total of 757 cases (33%) were MB, and 750 (33%) were in patients <15 years of age. Of the MB case-patients, 63% were male. Grade 2 disability was reported in 46 (3%) of the 1,338 cases reported from 2009–2017; the data are inconsistent before 2009.
The large number of new cases reported in 1997 was because of the nationwide screening and treatment campaign (92.2% of the population), precipitated by the rise in cases seen in 1996 and the adoption of the WHO elimination target of a prevalence of <1/10,000 population by 2000 (Figure 1). South Tarawa and Betio were screened again in 1998, covering 90.3% of the population. These efforts identified a large number of cases in South Tarawa and Betio rather than in the Outer Islands, which had previously been the site of most cases. The spike in reported cases in 2010 was from active case finding over that year. During 2009–2017, Betio and South Tarawa together contributed 786 (76%) of reported cases. The overall rate of both PB and MB leprosy rose with time, and the percentage of PB diagnosed increased in times of active surveillance and fell when surveillance was stopped.
The age distribution of MB and PB patients has remained relatively stable over time. We pooled the data to demonstrate the mean percentage of cases by age at diagnosis for MB and PB. Our findings showed that PB was diagnosed more frequently than MB in children <10 years of age and MB more frequently in patients 15–24 years of age (Figure 2). Changes in age-specific rates over time demonstrate that the rates of leprosy have been increasing in all age groups (Figure 3). Estimates from Poisson regression models suggested that incidence rates of MB in those 15–65 years of age were twice as high in male patients as in female patients (incidence rate ratio 2.1, 95% CI 1.7–2.4; p<0.001). We saw no difference in rates by sex for those with MB disease <15 years of age (incidence rate ratio 1.1, 95% CI 0.79–1.5; p = 0.59) and no difference in incidence rate ratio by sex for PB disease (p = 0.76).
The mean annual number of cases for a 5-year period for Kiribati has risen from 6.9/10,000 population in 1988–1993 to 15.2/10,000 population in 2013–2017 (Table 2). We grouped new diagnoses by location over 5-year periods using the census date as the center point; our analysis was limited because location was inconsistently recorded for the years 2007 and 2008, although age, sex, and classification data were complete. We omitted these 2 years from the location analysis (Table 2). The new case rate increased from 7.6/10,000 population/year in 1988–1992 to 27.0/10,000 population/year in 2013–2018 in Betio, from 7.3/10,000 population/year to 20.6/10,000 population/year in South Tarawa, and from 6.6/10,000 population/year to 7.4/10,000 population/year in the Outer Islands. The increase in case rate occurred at a similar time as the increase in overall population density, whereas the number of persons per household was stable.
Control of leprosy in Kiribati has never been achieved. Initial control efforts by isolation of known leprosy cases in Kiribati were clearly documented in the medical records from Makogai; these records indicate a new case rate of ≈4/10,000 population/year in Kirabati. The incidence rate is almost certainly an underestimate given the stigma associated with leprosy and the tendency to avoid persons with leprosy, transport them away from their families, and isolate them on an island thousands of miles away from home. Despite the introduction of dapsone, closure of Makogai, and widespread use of MDT, the elimination of leprosy as a public health problem was only reached in 1999 and has not been maintained in Kiribati. Rather, the number of cases has continued to rise since 1999. The speed and scale of the increase in cases demonstrate the potential for case numbers to rebound.
Unsurprisingly, increased case finding efforts have identified more cases in Kiribati. Surveys in India and Brazil have similar findings, which has raised concerns that cases may remain undetected even in areas of apparently low endemicity (22–24). The intensive activity in 1997 of Daulako et al. was a landmark event; they screened >90% of the population of Kiribati (15). Although the number of new cases dropped dramatically after this intervention, temporarily reaching the elimination target, case numbers have steadily climbed since. A combination of factors, such as a belief that leprosy had reached the WHO elimination target and was therefore defeated, a temporary effect of single dose prophylaxis administered in 1998, lack of active case finding, and low-resource status, may have contributed to this change.
The increase in annualized rate of new cases beginning around 2009 is most notable in South Tarawa and Betio, but a rise was also reported from the outer islands. The number of cases reported in the outer islands may be an underestimate, given that the increased detection, treatment and control efforts have been focused on South Tarawa and Betio. The data suggest that the conditions for spread persist in the outer islands but may be worsening in South Tarawa and Betio because of internal migration and worsening of socioeconomic conditions (8–10).
The percentage of cases of PB disease and low reported percentage of disability are consistent throughout 1988–2017. The period includes the well-documented whole-population survey in which Daulako observed similar findings (15). The high percentage of PB disease and low percentage of disability found in Kiribati are consistent with reports from other Micronesia countries, such as the Marshall Islands and the Federated States of Micronesia, which share similar demographic and socioeconomic characteristics (16).
In Kiribati, 32% of all new case-patients during 1988–2017 were children. One of the highest reported worldwide, this rate indicates a failure to control transmission. Other reports of high national percentages among children, including those from the Marshall Islands (15/80, 19%), the Federated States of Micronesia (40/169, 24%), Papua New Guinea (89/356, 25%), and Solomon Islands (7/43, 16%), indicate that conditions for transmission are not limited to Kiribati but are widespread in other regions of the Western Pacific region (16).
The high rate of leprosy in Kiribati is probably related to the socioeconomic conditions, but these relationships are not well understood. Household crowding has been associated with high rates of leprosy in both Brazil and Indonesia (10,11). Households of more than 7 persons, which is common in Kiribati and particularly in Betio and South Tarawa, appear to be at risk for leprosy infection. High rates of disease are also reported in isolated populations and those marked by displacement and civil unrest that may increase crowding and poverty, both of which are associated with transmission of M. leprae (25,26). The marked increases in the populations in the urban and semiurban areas of both South Tarawa and Betio have been driven by increased opportunities for work in Betio, with development of the port and light industry, and in South Tarawa, the location of central government and the international airport. Crowding caused by limited land availability and single-story homes has amplified the risk for spread of leprosy as well as other infections, such as tuberculosis, which is also reported at a high rate in Kiribati (27). These conditions may exacerbate deficiencies in healthcare services such that clinical infection remains unrecognized and untreated for prolonged periods.
Poor nutrition plays a role in susceptibility to leprosy. Case control studies in Brazil, India, and Bangladesh have identified food insecurity, intermittent starvation, and a lack of diversity in the diet as contributors to a high rate of leprosy (28–30). Pediatric undernutrition, maternal obesity, and micronutrient deficiencies are present in Kiribati. Children <5 years of age are particularly at risk; 34% are reported to have stunted growth and 37% to have anemia (31–32). A recent study demonstrated that low dietary diversity and a high prevalence of multiple micronutrient deficiencies were common in Kiribati (33).
Economic conditions in Kiribati, although improving, are rising from a low base; we expect to see substantial pressures on economic resources and land use associated with climate change and sea level rise, as well as population increase. These changes may have substantial effects on living standards and leprosy rates.
The limitations of our analysis include the potential for error in diagnosis, case recording, and data transcription. To mitigate the risk for errors, we have validated cases by a leprologist, recorded data prospectively, and checked the entered data against the case registers. Underdiagnosis of cases is likely but will have been reduced with active case finding to identify previously unsuspected cases. Overall, the changes in rates suggest that our observations are sufficiently robust to indicate real changes in the spread of leprosy in Kiribati.
In conclusion, the number of new cases and age-standardized rates of leprosy reported in Kiribati have risen over the past decade, despite the ready availability of MDT. The long incubation period for leprosy implies that it may reemerge and rates increase if conditions such as crowding worsen, if economic development is not achieved, or if leprosy services are poorly resourced. Reaching the WHO-specified elimination goal may be temporary without an ongoing commitment to comprehensive control programs over the long term (34–36). The introduction of postexposure prophylaxis to household contacts or to high-risk populations may offer a new tool to reduce the number of cases, the social consequences of stigma, and disability; this treatment has begun in several poorly resourced countries (37–40).
Dr. Chambers is an infectious diseases physician at Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand, a professor of pathology at the University of Otago, Christchurch, and a board member of the Pacific Leprosy Foundation who convenes the Foundation’s medical committee. His primary research interests are community-acquired pneumonia, staphylococcal infections, legionellosis, and methyl group metabolism and leprosy.
Acknowledgments
We thank Jill Tomlinson, Lala Gittoes, Teetita Uriam, Kiteon Kabure, Apisalome Nakolinivalu, and Judy Baker.
J.B. compiled the electronic database of medical records from patients isolated on Makogai.
The Ministry of Health in Kiribati and the Pacific Leprosy Foundation provided funding.
References
- Monot M, Honoré N, Garnier T, Zidane N, Sherafi D, Paniz-Mondolfi A, et al. Comparative genomic and phylogeographic analysis of Mycobacterium leprae. [Corrigendum in: Nat Genet. 2010;42:361]. Nat Genet. 2009;41:1282–9. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Ministry of Finance and Economic Development, Government of Kiribati. Census report volume I final report. 2015 [cited 2020 Feb 10]. http://www.mfed.gov.ki/publications/census-report-2015-volume-i-final-report
- Yu R, Jarrett P, Holland D, Sherwood J, Pikholz C. Leprosy in New Zealand: an epidemiological update. N Z Med J. 2015;128:9–14.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- Faaotese A, Sikaleti A, Priest P, Chambers ST. Knowledge and attitudes to leprosy of Pacific people living in New Zealand. Lepr Rev. 2016;87:368–77.
- Rodrigues LC, Lockwood DN. Leprosy now: epidemiology, progress, challenges, and research gaps. Lancet Infect Dis. 2011;11:464–70. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Moet FJ, Pahan D, Schuring RP, Oskam L, Richardus JH. Physical distance, genetic relationship, age, and leprosy classification are independent risk factors for leprosy in contacts of patients with leprosy. J Infect Dis. 2006;193:346–53. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- White C, Franco-Paredes C. Leprosy in the 21st century. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2015;28:80–94. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Bakker MI, Hatta M, Kwenang A, Van Mosseveld P, Faber WR, Klatser PR, et al. Risk factors for developing leprosy—a population-based cohort study in Indonesia. Lepr Rev. 2006;77:48–61.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- Barreto JG, Guimarães LS, Leão MR, Ferreira DV, Lima RA, Salgado CG. Anti-PGL-I seroepidemiology in leprosy cases: household contacts and school children from a hyperendemic municipality of the Brazilian Amazon. Lepr Rev. 2011;82:358–70.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- Pandya SS. The first international leprosy conference, Berlin, 1897: the politics of segregation. Indian J Lepr. 2004;76:51–70.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Epidemiological review of leprosy in the WHO Western Pacific region 2000. Manila (Philippines): The Organization; 2002 [cited 2020 Feb 10]. http://www.wpro.who.int/leprosy/documents/leprosy_review_2000.pdf
- World Health Organization. 44th World Health Assembly. Resolution no. WHA51.15. Geneva: The Organization; 1998 [cited 2020 Feb 10]. http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/mediacentre/WHA_51.15_Eng.pdf
- Daulako EC. Population screening and mass chemoprophylaxis in Kiribati. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis. 1999;67(Suppl):S23–5.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- World Health Organization. Global leprosy update 2016: accelerating reduction in disease burden. Weekly epidemiological record. 2017 [cited 2018 Apr 7]. http://www.who.int/wer/2017/wer9235
- Ministry of Finance and Economic Development, Government of Kiribati. Kiribati development plan, 2016 to 2019. 2019 [cited 2020 Feb 10]. http://www.mfed.gov.ki/publications/kiribati-development-plan-2016-2019
- World Health Organization. Expert committee on leprosy, 7th report. Geneva: The Organization; 1998 [cited 2020 Mar 16]. http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/42060
- Brandsma JW, Van Brakel WH. WHO disability grading: operational definitions. Lepr Rev. 2003;74:366–73.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- R Core Team. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing; 2019.
- Dabrera TM, Tillekeratne LG, Fernando MS, Kasturiaratchi ST, Østbye T. Prevalence and correlates of leprosy in a high-risk community setting in Sri Lanka. Asia Pac J Public Health. 2016;28:586–91. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Barreto JG, Guimarães LS, Frade MA, Rosa PS, Salgado CG. High rates of undiagnosed leprosy and subclinical infection amongst school children in the Amazon Region. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2012;107(Suppl 1):60–7. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Bernardes F, Paula NA, Leite MN, Abi-Rached TLC, Vernal S, Silva MBD, et al. Evidence of hidden leprosy in a supposedly low endemic area of Brazil. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2017;112:822–8. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Hegazy AA, Abdel-Hamid IA, Ahmed SF, Hammad SM, Hawas SA. Leprosy in a high-prevalence Egyptian village: epidemiology and risk factors. Int J Dermatol. 2002;41:681–6. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Kumar A, Girdhar A, Chakma JK, Girdhar BK. Detection of previously undetected leprosy cases in Firozabad District (U.P.), India during 2006-2009: a short communication. Lepr Rev. 2013;84:124–7.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- World Health Organization. Tuberculosis country profiles [cited 2020 Feb 14]. http://www.who.int/tb/country/data/profiles
- Kerr-Pontes LR, Barreto ML, Evangelista CM, Rodrigues LC, Heukelbach J, Feldmeier H. Socioeconomic, environmental, and behavioural risk factors for leprosy in North-east Brazil: results of a case-control study. Int J Epidemiol. 2006;35:994–1000. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Feenstra SG, Nahar Q, Pahan D, Oskam L, Richardus JH. Recent food shortage is associated with leprosy disease in Bangladesh: a case-control study. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2011;5:
e1029 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - Wagenaar I, van Muiden L, Alam K, Bowers R, Hossain MA, Kispotta K, et al. Diet-related risk factors for leprosy: a case-control study. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015;9:
e0003766 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - United Nations Children’s Fund. Situation analysis of children in the Pacific Island countries, UNICEF, Suva, 2017 [cited 2020 Feb 28]. https://www.unicef.org/pacificislands/media/661/file/Situation-Analysis-Pacific-Island-Countries.pdf
- World Health Organization. Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Action plan to reduce the double burden of malnutrition in the Western Pacific Region (2015–2020). 2015 [cited 2020 Feb 28]. http://iris.wpro.who.int/handle/10665.1/10892
- Eme PE, Burlingame B, Douwes J, Kim N, Foliaki S. Quantitative estimates of dietary intake in households of South Tarawa, Kiribati. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2019;28:131–8.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- Smith WC, van Brakel W, Gillis T, Saunderson P, Richardus JH. The missing millions: a threat to the elimination of leprosy. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015;9:
e0003658 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - Smith CS, Noordeen SK, Richardus JH, Sansarricq H, Cole ST, Soares RC, et al. A strategy to halt leprosy transmission. Lancet Infect Dis. 2014;14:96–8. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Smith CS, Aerts A, Saunderson P, Kawuma J, Kita E, Virmond M. Multidrug therapy for leprosy: a game changer on the path to elimination. Lancet Infect Dis. 2017;17:e293–7. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Richardus JH. Chemoprophylaxis: sufficient evidence for starting implementation pilots. Lepr Rev. 2015;86:128–9.PubMedGoogle Scholar
- Gilkison C, Chambers S, Blok DJ, Richardus JH, Timeon E, Rimon E, et al. Predicting the impact of household contact and mass chemoprophylaxis on future new leprosy cases in South Tarawa, Kiribati: A modelling study. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2019;13:
e0007646 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - Tiwari A, Mieras L, Dhakal K, Arif M, Dandel S, Richardus JH; LPEP Study Group. Introducing leprosy post-exposure prophylaxis into the health systems of India, Nepal and Indonesia: a case study. BMC Health Serv Res. 2017;17:684. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Steinmann P, Reed SG, Mirza F, Hollingsworth TD, Richardus JH. Innovative tools and approaches to end the transmission of Mycobacterium leprae. Lancet Infect Dis. 2017;17:e298–305. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
Figures
Tables
Cite This ArticleOriginal Publication Date: March 30, 2020
Table of Contents – Volume 26, Number 5—May 2020
EID Search Options |
---|
Advanced Article Search – Search articles by author and/or keyword. |
Articles by Country Search – Search articles by the topic country. |
Article Type Search – Search articles by article type and issue. |
Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:
Stephen T. Chambers, University of Otago, Christchurch—Pathology, PO Box 4345, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand
Top