Mali – First phase of baseline data collection completed (March-April
2004)
The first phase of the Mali baseline data collection (BDC) took place in
March and April 2004. The team was composed of Ministry of Health staff (led
by Dr Robert Dembele, Coordinator of the Programme National de Lutte
contre les Schistosomiases, by Dr Moussa Sacko, Dr Aly Landoure and Dr
Godefroy Coulibaly, epidemiologists of the Institut National de Recherche
en Santé Publique, and by Dr Adama Keita, ultrasound specialist) and
accompanied by Dr Albis-Francesco Gabrielli from SCI.
During
the first half of the BDC, 537 children were enrolled from five village
schools along River Niger, in an area highly endemic for urinary
schistosomiasis, located in the Segou region. Information recorded on each
child included age, sex, anthropometric measurements (such as height,
weight, sternum and umbilical circumference), a clinical and an ultrasound
examination. Biological samples collected included blood for anaemia
assessment, urine and faeces for parasitological examination for
schistosomes and intestinal helminths. Each child enrolled in the survey was
treated with the appropriate dose of Praziquantel and Albendazole, and any
potential side effects were monitored.

Above Left: Urine samples with gross haematuria.
Above Right: Ultrasound scan of the bladder showing masses protruding into
the organ’s lumen
In
each of the five schools the parasitological prevalence of Schistosoma
haematobium infection was higher than 98%; the mean prevalence of
microhaematuria (assessed by Hemastix©) was 85.9%. 50.4% of the sample had
urinary system pathology detectable by Ultrasound, and lesions were almost
uniformly spread all over the sample age groups, from 7 to 14 years old. The
ultrasound image presented here is particularly striking of the sequelae
often associated with S. haematobium infection.
Data collection has subsequently continued in other areas of the Segou
region, namely the Office du Niger-Macina area and the San area, and results
will be reported shortly. Segou is the first of five regions of Mali where
the Malian Ministry of Health will collect data on prevalence, intensity and
morbidity due to urinary and intestinal schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted
helminths among school-age children.
Transmission of schistosomiasis along River Niger in Mali

River Niger near Segou. Disease epidemiology in this area is linked with the
seasonal overflowing of the great river.
The epidemiological-ecological pattern of disease transmission in
villages situated along the River Niger in the Segou area is strictly linked
to seasonal overflowing of the river. During the rainy season (the so-called
hivernage, which starts in June, reaches its peak in
August-September, and starts to decline in October to end up in November)
the river overflows and the water fills a plain about 500m-wide between its
banks and the villages, which are usually slightly higher (ca. 5m) than the
surrounding plains, or are protected by small dams.
The flooded plains, where many temporary ponds are created by the
overflowing of the river, and many others by the rain itself (that also
creates small rivers pointing towards the River Niger) are the major foci of
transmission, because snails thrive there and many human water contact
activities are linked to them, both occupational (e.g. agricultural and
fishing) and recreational (e.g. playing).

Collective fishing in the Office du Niger area. Many of the small
natural water bodies are the sites of very intense water contact and
potential disease transmission.
During the dry season many small ponds are left behind by the river as it
retreats to its bed. Many of them gradually dry up (temporary ponds or
“mares temporaires”), but many others persist all year round (permanent
ponds or “mares permanentes”). These can sustain snails and therefore
disease transmission during the whole year, as they are frequently used for
irrigation purposes (especially horticulture). Market gardening and fishing
are the main sources of income, but both are responsible for behavioural
patterns that highly increase the risk of transmission. Schistosomiasis is
in this case an “occupational disease” for all age-groups, since also very
young children are employed for fishing and water collection and transport.
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