Launch of programme in Tanzania – July 2nd 2005

On Saturday 2nd July 2005, the National Schistosomiasis and Soil
Transmitted Helminth Control Programme in Tanzania Mainland was launched at
Chadulu primary school in Dodoma Municipal, about 450 km from Dar es Salaam.
The Guest of Honour was the Hon. Frederick Sumaye (MP), the Prime
Minister, together with Hon. Anna Abdallah (MP), the Minister of Health,
Hon. Hussein Mwinyi (MP), the Deputy Minister of Health, Mrs Mariam Mwaffisi,
the Permanent Secretary and Mr. Oliver Mhaiki, Director of Primary Education
representing the Ministry of Education and Culture. Other guests included
the Regional Commissioner for Dodoma, Dr. Mohamed Amri from WHO Tanzania
Office, the Director of the National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR)
Dr. Andrew Kitua, Dr. Godfrey Kaatano (NIMR Mwanza), Dr. Ngoma (TPRI Arusha)
and Mr Ali Foum, (Helminth Control Programme, Zanzibar). SCI was represented
by Prof. Alan Fenwick (Director) and Dr. Ursuline Nyandindi (Tanzanian
National School Health Manager and SCI coordinator).

Prof. Charles Kihamia from Muhimbili University College of Health
Sciences provided technical information to the guests who visited a display
of the parasites, images highlighting the consequences of disease and health
education material before the ceremony. After the introductions, there were
short speeches from several distinguished guests and then a keynote address
from the Prime Minister. The speeches were interspersed with entertainment
from local school children singing songs and performing drama which
highlighted the transmission, symptoms and cure of schistosomiasis. There
was also singing and dancing from a special dance troupe from the Dodoma
region. The launch ceremony was followed by a treatment demonstration, and
all the distinguished guests were dewormed with one lucky school girl
receiving praziquantel from the Prime Minister to officially launch the
school treatment campaign.
The launch saw the culmination of a year of preparatory activities which
have been occurring in country. Parasitological surveys in the Lake and
Western Zones of Tanzania took place throughout 2004-2005 to produce disease
risk maps to define the intervention strategy. A national survey across
every primary school in Tanzania using the self-reported schistosomiasis
questionnaire was undertaken to further define the extent of the disease
across the country and the final plans for intervention have been produced.
Throughout the rest of 2005, there will be mass treatment of 5 million
individuals in the areas with the highest burden of disease. During August
the focus will be on the six regions around Lake Victoria where S.
haematobium and S. mansoni are prevalent, though the latter is confined to
areas close to the lake. Hookworm prevalence is also very high across the
regions and therefore albendazole will be co-administered with praziquantel
to the targeted 3 million children.
Along the coast a collection of baseline data from randomly selected
schools will be followed by training of teachers and then mass treatment of
approximately 2 million school children against S. haematobium using
praziquantel donated by MedPharm pharmaceuticals assisted by donations from
Canadian charities. In the coastal area, albendazole and ivermectin are
delivered by the lymphatic filariasis programme during the first week of
October, and so praziquantel will be delivered in November.
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