Research and Control Workshop: Schistosomiasis and Soil-Transmitted
Helminths in Francophone Africa
In collaboration with the Research
Network for Schistosomiasis in Africa (RSNA) and WHO’s TDR (Special
Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases), the
Schistosomiasis Control Initiative (SCI) organised a three day workshop
in Bamako, Mali. The workshop focused on schistosomiasis and
soil-transmitted helminth control and research in Francophone Africa.
With the assistance of Mali’s National Public Health Research Institute
(INRSP) and the Ministry of Health’s National Schistosomiasis Control
Programme (PNLSH) the workshop hosted researchers, national coordinators
and international experts from over 12 countries (Benin, Burkina Faso,
Burundi, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Denmark, France, Guinea, Mali,
Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Switzerland, Togo and the United Kingdom).
The workshop took place from the 2-5 July 2008 at the Nord-Sud Hotel
in Bamako and both the Minister of Health and the Malian WHO
representative presided over the opening ceremony. The aim of the
workshop was to reinforce cooperation and collaboration between
francophone African countries for the control of and research into
schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminths. The objectives of the
workshop included updating national coordinators and research scientists
on current research and control activities throughout the region,
identifying collaboration mechanisms to facilitate information exchange,
and identifying areas where more research is necessary in order to
improve control.
The workshop commenced with presentations from different countries
covering topics such as preventative chemotherapy, transmission, disease
epidemiology, efficacy of Praziquantel, the use of ultrasound to detect
morbidity, longitudinal monitoring and surveillance, mixed infections,
capacity building. Attendees were then split into two working groups –
research and control – to develop joint goals and objectives for future
schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminths.
Overall, the workshop was a success. Francophone researchers and
national coordinators were able to exchange ideas and learn from each
other. The lessons learned from the workshop will ensure best practices
are used in each of the countries, will empower national coordinators
and researchers to successfully run large-scale control programmes, and
ensure that collaboration between the countries continues. Feedback was
very positive. Both SCI and RSNA are proud to have been able to work
with the Ministry of Health and WHO-TDR to organise such a workshop. |