From left: Dean Sienko, Carter Center Vice President, Health
Programs; Salissou Kane, Carter Center Country Representative for Niger;
Former US President Jimmy Carter; Dr Walid Mehalaine, Head, OFID’s
Grants and Technical Assistance Unit; Mary Ann Peters, Carter Center
CEO; and Sadi Musa, Carter Center Country Representative for Mali.
Photo & Story: The Carter Center
Monday, March 27, 2017
OFID awards Carter Center $800,000 grant for Blinding Trachoma Elimination in Mali, Niger
ATLANTA — The OPEC Fund for International
Development (OFID) has awarded The Carter Center a grant of US$800,000
to help support an initiative to eliminate blinding trachoma in Mali and
Niger.
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter; Ambassador (ret.) Mary Ann
Peters, the Center’s CEO; and Dr. Walid Mehalaine, head of OFID’s Grants
and Technical Assistance Unit, gathered Friday, March 24, for a signing
ceremony at The Carter Center in Atlanta. Dr. Mehalaine represented Mr.
Suleiman Al-Herbish, Director-General of OFID.
“This support is deeply appreciated and will improve health for many
people as we strive for the elimination of blinding trachoma as a public
health problem in Mali and Niger,” said President Carter, founder of
The Carter Center, which has been a leader in the fight against trachoma
for two decades.
Including this grant, OFID has given The Carter Center $3 million since 1997 to support multiple public health programs.
“I commend the Carter Center for its leading role in the battle
against neglected tropical diseases such as blinding trachoma and Guinea
worm,” Al-Herbish stated. “Eliminating and treating preventable
diseases is particularly important in the fight against poverty. Since
1997, cooperation between our organizations has been very beneficial.
OFID values this partnership and looks forward to deepening it in these
and other areas of mutual interest.”
Trachoma, caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis, is
the world’s leading infectious cause of blindness. Evidence of it can be
traced to as early as 8,000 B.C. It affects millions of people in
communities that lack access to clean water and sanitation.
The Carter Center’s Trachoma Control Program has worked with the Mali
and Niger National Trachoma Programs to implement the full World Health
Organization SAFE strategy since 1999. SAFE is an acronym for Surgery,
Antibiotics, Facial cleanliness, and Environmental improvement.
To date in Mali and Niger, The Carter Center has facilitated 94,919
surgeries, distributed more than 4 million doses of antibiotics through
surgical activities and mass drug administration, provided more than
4,000 villages with health education (including the importance of facial
cleanliness to ward off flies), supported the construction of 219,947
latrines, and trained and equipped 10,084 masons in Mali and Niger.
The three-year project supported by the OFID grant will enable the
program to do even more to eliminate blinding trachoma in those
countries by 2020, including the provision of free corrective surgeries
to around 36,000 individuals, distribution of antibiotic eye ointment,
promotion of hygiene campaigns, and the construction of latrines to
limit fly populations. Also planned are support to national programs,
health education training for an estimated 9,500 health workers,
community leaders, women’s groups and school personnel, and research in
support of the global trachoma program. The elimination of blinding
trachoma is in line with OFID’s mission to eradicate all forms of
poverty in partner countries, particularly the least developed
countries, and its support to the post-2015 Sustainable Development
Goals agenda (SDG3).
“It’s gratifying to have generous partners like OFID join us in the
effort to eliminate blinding trachoma in West Africa and elsewhere,”
Peters said. “Strong, dependable partners allow us to keep advancing
against this horrifying disease among impoverished populations.”
A recently announced $5.1 million Conrad N. Hilton Foundation
challenge grant to The Carter Center will match the OFID grant
dollar-for-dollar, effectively doubling the impact of the gift.
More about trachoma
Infections often begin in early childhood. Multiple infections can
eventually cause inflammation and scarring of the inner eyelid, which
leads to trachomatous trichiasis, the painful, blinding stage of
trachoma in which the eyelashes turn inward and scratch the surface of
the eyeball. A simple outpatient surgical procedure can relieve pain
and, if done early enough, reverse the condition.
“Women and children are disproportionately affected by trachoma
because of their frequent close contact,” said Kelly Callahan, director
of the Carter Center’s Trachoma Control Program. “Infected secretions
from the child’s nose and eyes get on the mother’s hands and clothing;
when she happens to touch her own eye, the mother becomes infected.”
Trachoma can be found in over 50 countries, most in Africa and the
Middle East, and a few countries in the Americas and Asia. Globally, 200
million people are at risk for trachoma, and over 3.2 million are at
immediate risk for blindness from trichiasis. Although trachoma is
easily preventable, more than 2 million of the world’s poorest people
are blind today because they did not have access to eyelid surgery or
prevention strategies. The disease is responsible for an estimated
annual productivity loss of up to $8 billion.
About The Carter Center
The Atlanta-based Carter Center is a pioneer in disease eradication
and elimination. For more than three decades, the Center has led efforts
to end suffering related to neglected tropical diseases, including
Guinea worm, river blindness, and trachoma. As part of that work, The
Carter Center has delivered more than 500 million doses of medication.
About the OPEC Fund for International Development
The OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) is the development
finance institution established by the Member States of OPEC in 1976 as
a channel of aid to developing countries. OFID works in cooperation
with developing country partners and the international donor community
to stimulate economic growth and alleviate poverty in all disadvantaged
regions of the world. It does this by providing financing to build
essential infrastructure, strengthen social services delivery, and
promote productivity, competitiveness and trade. OFID’s work is
people-centered, focusing on projects that meet basic needs — such as
food, energy, clean water and sanitation, health care and education —
with the aim of encouraging self-reliance and inspiring hope for the
future.
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