National trachoma surveillance annual report, 2012

Authors

  • Carleigh S Cowling National Trachoma Surveillance Reporting Unit, The Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales
  • Bette C Liu School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales; Sax Institute, Ultimo, New South Wales
  • Thomas L Snelling Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, Subiaco, Perth, Western Australia; Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Centre for Child Health Research, University of Western Australia
  • James S Ward Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Central Australia, Alice Springs, Northern Territory
  • John M Kaldor National Trachoma Surveillance Reporting Unit, The Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales
  • David P Wilson National Trachoma Surveillance Reporting Unit, The Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2015.39.9

Keywords:

active trachoma, control activities, endemic, facial cleanliness, Northern Territory, Queensland, SAFE control strategy, South Australia, surveillance, Western Australia

Abstract

Australia remains the only developed country to have endemic levels of trachoma (a prevalence of 5% or greater among children) in some regions. Endemic trachoma in Australia is found predominantly in remote and very remote Aboriginal communities. The Australian Government funds a National Trachoma Surveillance and Reporting Unit to collate, analyse and report trachoma prevalence data and document trachoma control strategies in Australia through an annual surveillance report. This report presents data collected in 2012. Data are collected from Aboriginal and Torres Strait communities designated as at-risk for endemic trachoma in the Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia. The World Health Organization grading criteria were used to diagnose cases of trachoma in Aboriginal children with jurisdictions focusing screening activities on the 5–9 years age group; however, some children in the 1–4 and 10–14 years age groups were also screened. The prevalence of trachoma within a community was used to guide treatment strategies as a public health response. Aboriginal adults aged 40 years or older were screened for trichiasis. Community screening coverage of the designated at-risk communities was 96%. Screening coverage of the estimated population of children aged 5–9 years and adults aged 40 years or older in at-risk communities was 71% and 31%, respectively. Trachoma prevalence among children aged 5–9 years who were screened was 4%. Of communities screened, 63% were found to have no cases of active trachoma and 25% were found to have endemic levels of trachoma. Treatment was required in 87 at-risk communities screened. Treatment coverage of active cases and their contacts varied from 79%–97% between jurisdictions. Trichiasis prevalence was 2% within the screened communities. Commun Dis Intell 2015;39(1):E146–E157.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Tellis B, Dunn R, Keeffe JE. National Trachoma Surveillance and Reporting Unit: Surveillance report for active trachoma, 2006:. Commun Dis Intell 2007;31(4):366–374

Tellis B, Dunn R, Keeffe JE, Taylor HR. Trachoma Surveillance annual report, 2007. A report by the National Trachoma Surveillance and Reporting Unit. Commun Dis Intell 2008;32(4):388–399.

Tellis B, Fotis K, Dunn R, Keeffe JE, Taylor HR. Trachoma Surveillance Report 2008. National Trachoma Surveillance and Reporting Unit.Melbourne, Centre for Eye Research Australia; 2009.

Adams K, Burgess J, Dharmage S. National Trachoma Surveillance Report 2009. National Trachoma Surveillance and Reporting Unit. Melbourne: Centre for Molecular, Environmental, Genetic and Analytic Epidemiology, University of Melbourne; 2010.

Cowling CS; Popovic G; Liu BC; Ward JS; Snelling TL; Kaldor JM, et al. Australian trachoma surveillance annual report, 2010. Commun Dis Intell 2012;36(3):E242–E250.

Cowling CS; Liu BC; Ward JS; Snelling TL; Kaldor JM, Wilson, DP. Australian trachoma surveillance annual report, 2011. Commun Dis Intell 2013;37(2):E121–E129.

Resnikoff S, Pascolini D, Etya’ale D, Kocur I, Pararajasegaram R, Pokharel GP, et al. Global data on visual impairment in the year 2002. Bull World Health Organ 2004;82(11):844–851.

Communicable Diseases Network Australia. Guidelines for the public health management of trachoma in Australia. March 2006. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia; 2006.

Polack S, Brooker S, Kuper K, Mariotti S, Mabey D, Foster A. Mapping the global distribution of trachoma. Bull World Health Organ 2005;80(12):913–919.

Taylor HR. Trachoma: a blinding scourge from the Bronze Age to the Twenty First Century. Melbourne: Centre for Eye Research Australia; 2008.

World Health Organization. WHA51.11 Global Elimination of Blinding Trachoma; 1998. Last reviewed August 2014. Available from: http://www.who.int/blindness/causes/WHA51.11/en/

Kuper H, Solomon AW, Buchan J, Zondervan M, Foster A, Mabey D. A critical review of the SAFE strategy for the prevention of blinding trachoma. Lancet Infect Dis 2003;3(6):372–381.

World Health Organization. Future Approaches to Trachoma Control – Report of a Global Scientific Meeting. Geneva, 17–20 June 1996. Geneva: WHO; 1997.

Mariotti SP, Pararajasegaram R, Resnikoff S. Trachoma: Looking forward to Global Elimination of Trachoma by 2020 (GET 2020). Am J Trop Med Hyg 2003;69(5 Suppl):33–35.

Taylor HR. Trachoma in Australia. Med J Aust 2001;175(7):371–372.

Communicable Diseases Network Australia. Guidelines for the public health management of trachoma in Australia. January 2014. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia; 2014.

World Health Organization. SAFE documents: Trachoma simplified grading cards. Last accessed August 2014. Available at: http://www.who.int/blindness/causes/trachoma_documents/en/index.html

The Healthy School-Age Kids (HSAK) Program [online]. Last reviewed: July 2011. Available from: http://remotehealthatlas.nt.gov.au/healthy_school_age_kids_program.pdf

Mariotti SP, Pruss A. The SAFE strategy. Preventing trachoma. A guide for environmental sanitation and improved hygiene. WHO/PBD/GET/00.7/Rev1. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2000.

Australian Bureau of Statistics. Experimental Estimates and Projections, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, 1991 to 2021. Released 8 September 2009. Accessed: 15 May 2011. Canberra: ABS cat No: 3238.0; 2009.

Downloads

Published

01/03/15

How to Cite

Cowling, Carleigh S, Bette C Liu, Thomas L Snelling, James S Ward, John M Kaldor, and David P Wilson. 2015. “National Trachoma Surveillance Annual Report, 2012”. Communicable Diseases Intelligence 39 (March):146-57. https://doi.org/10.33321/cdi.2015.39.9.

Issue

Section

Annual report

Categories

Most read articles by the same author(s)