Urinary schistosomiasis questionnaires on Zanzibar (Unguja)
From 2nd June to 15th July, 2005, James Rudge, an MSc Modern
Epidemiology student at Imperial College, worked with the Helminth Control
Laboratory in Zanzibar (Unguja) with funding from the SCI. This is a brief
account of his experience of fieldwork on the island.
“Welcome to our beautiful island!” - I hear the friendly greeting
familiar to most westerners strolling through Stone Town, the principle town
on Unguja island of the Zanzibar archipelago. As usual, a local tout is
trying to enrol me on a tour. After explaining that I’m here for research
rather than recreation, he seems happy to make small talk instead of money:
“What kind of research?”
“Kichocho”, I reply, using the local term for schistosomiasis.
“I see. But I think there is no problem of kichocho in Zanzibar?”
This typifies the response of several people I meet in Stone Town.
Indeed, in the town, and on the on the idyllic beaches for which Zanzibar is
famous, with their tourist resorts and clear turquoise waters, it is easy to
believe that there is no problem. Take a trip further inland however, and
it’s a different story. In these poor rural communities, where urinary
schistosomiasis is endemic, passing blood in your urine is a ‘normal’ part
of growing up.
As
an epidemiology masters student at Imperial College London, I spent 6 weeks
in Zanzibar working with the team at the recently opened Helminth Control
Laboratory Unguja (HCLU) – the hub of activity for the Ministry of Health’s
“Kick Out Kichocho” campaign. My project focused on Chaani, a village in the
north of the island where 50% of school children are infected. Using a
combination of foot-mapping, snail surveys, and questionnaires, the main
objective of my fieldwork was to pinpoint foci of transmission in Chaani,
and investigate behavioural patterns which could be predisposing certain
individuals to higher risks of infection.
The most obvious suspect as a source of infection was a stream running
through the area, along which human contact was immediately apparent.
Despite the availability of well and tap water, many still choose the stream
for washing clothes as the softer water allows them to economise on soap. In
the hot climate, children playing in the stream was to be expected – some
sites looked so inviting I was tempted to jump in and cool down myself!
Out in the field we were always warmly welcomed by the community, and
often accumulated a sizeable audience of children understandably bewildered
to see a strange white guy, clad in rubber waders and marigold gloves,
rooting around for snails in their back garden. The snails initially proved
to be surprisingly elusive, however. Luckily the local school children were
much more cooperative, not to mention delightful to work with.
Questionnaires proved a simple and effective tool for obtaining information
on their water contact behaviour. Moreover, locations frequently reported by
children diagnosed with schistosomiasis in a recent screening survey allowed
us to focus our search for transmission sites, and in fact led us to a large
and infected Bulinus snail colony.
This
process of pinpointing transmission sites not only facilitates more targeted
control strategies, but will hopefully also reveal sites suitable for future
studies aimed at testing the effectiveness of novel interventions, such as
the introduction of refractory snail species as a form of biological
control. Such strategies may be necessary alongside the current mass drug
administrations in the pursuit to “Kick Out Kichocho” to ensure that the
positive effects of chemotherapy are longer lasting. |