FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jan. 19, 2014
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter Congratulates People of Ghana for Eliminating Guinea Worm Disease
ATLANTA…Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and The Carter Center
congratulate Ghana on being certified by the World Health Organization
this week as having eliminated Guinea worm (Dracunculus medinensis), a
water-borne parasitic disease poised to be the second human disease in
history to be eradicated.
“Ghana’s triumph over Guinea worm disease serves as a reminder to the
world and the remaining endemic countries that the greatest challenges
can be overcome with hard work, political commitment, and the support of
the international community,” said President Carter, founder of The
Carter Center, which has led the international campaign to eradicate the
disease.
President Carter has recalled seeing his first case of Guinea worm
disease in Denchira, a village near the Ghanaian capital of Accra in
March 1988 (Read more in President Carter’s essay for TIME magazine ).
The WHO’s International Commission for the Certification of
Dracunculiasis Eradication, in consultation with Ghana’s Ministry of
Health, sent a certification team to Ghana in July 2014 to assess
whether transmission of the disease continued or whether it was
interrupted for three or more years after the last indigenous case was
reported. On Jan. 14, 2015, WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan
provided Ghana with official notification that WHO has certified Ghana
as Guinea worm-free.
For a disease to be eradicated (worldwide), every country must be
certified as free of the disease, even if transmission has never taken
place there. To date, 198 countries and territories have been certified.
The WHO is responsible for certifying countries as Guinea worm-free,
and is the only organization that can officially certify the eradication
of a disease.
The Carter Center began leading the international Guinea worm
eradication campaign in 1986. The following year, Ghana became one of
the Carter Center Guinea Worm Eradication Program’s first country
partners. Nearly 180,000 cases of Guinea worm disease were reported
during the county’s first national case search in 1989. This ranked
Ghana second in the world in cases at the time.
Strong partnerships throughout the campaign helped the nation
overcome many challenges and setbacks, including a massive Guinea worm
outbreak in Savelugu town in 2007. As a result of redoubled program
efforts and reaffirmed national and international commitments, cases
were reduced the following year by 85 percent—the greatest single-year
reduction of any moderately endemic country in the history of the
campaign.
In May 2010, Ghana reported and contained its last indigenous case,
indicating that the disease cycle had been broken after a 22-year
(1988-2010) nationwide battle.
Today, Guinea worm disease remains endemic in pockets of South Sudan,
Mali, Chad, and Ethiopia. On Jan. 12, 2015, The Carter Center announced
that there were 126 provisional Guinea worm cases reported in 2014.
When the campaign began, there were an estimated 3.5 million cases in 21
countries in Africa and Asia. Critical to the campaign’s success has
been long-term collaboration at the community level as well as among the
national ministries of health and key implementing partners.
Guinea worm disease afflicts the world’s poorest and most isolated
communities, and is contracted when people consume Guinea
worm-contaminated water. After a year, a meter-long worm slowly emerges
from the body through a painful blister in the skin. The ancient disease
is being wiped out through health education and behavior change, for
example teaching people to filter all drinking water and keeping anyone
with an emerging worm from entering water sources. There are no vaccines
or medicines to prevent or treat the disease.
“The last cases of any disease are the most challenging to wipe out,
especially when stability is threatened in the endemic communities of
South Sudan and Mali,” said Carter Center Vice President of Health
Programs Dr. Donald Hopkins, who has led the international campaign with
Dr. Ernesto Ruiz-Tiben, also at the Center.
“But we know that with the
international community’s support, eradication of Guinea worm disease is
not a question of if, but when,” Dr. Hopkins said.
Strong Partnerships
Many generous foundations, corporations, governments, and individuals
have made the Carter Center’s work to eradicate Guinea worm disease
possible, including major support from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation; the United Kingdom’s Department for International
Development (DFID); Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) –
United Kingdom; and His Highness General Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al
Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, in the name of His Highness Sheikh
Khalifa bin Zayed, President of the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The
DuPont Corporation and Precision Fabrics Group donated nylon filter
cloth early in the campaign; Vestergaard donated pipe and household
cloth filters in recent years. ABATE® larvicide (temephos) has been
donated for many years by BASF. Key implementing partners include the
ministries of health in endemic countries, The Carter Center, WHO, CDC,
and UNICEF.
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