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Otamires A. Souza

Bio: Otamires A. Souza is an academic researcher from Universidade de Pernambuco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schistosomiasis & Population. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 47 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A seven-year project for the control of schistosomiasis due to S. mansoni was launched in November 1960 in the small village of Pontezinha, county of Cabo, state of Pernambuco and shows that a successful degree of control has been achieved in the project area.
Abstract: A seven-year project for the control of schistosomiasis due to S. mansoni was launched in November 1960 in the small village of Pontezinha, county of Cabo, state of Pernambuco. Control measures were limited to environmental sanitation and a community health education programme. Human infection rates were progressively reduced in the project area. Surveys made in 1967 and 1968 show that a successful degree of control of schistosomiasis has been achieved in the project area. Studies on snail population dynamics and on natural infection of small mammals captured in the area were made. The average monthly cost of the project was US $1,402·00, or an equivalent of US $0·98 per month per protected person.

47 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It appears clear-cut from the review, that while chemotherapy has been and will remain the best option for morbidity control, sanitation has an important role to play not only to sustain the benefits of chemotherapy but also to protect the uninfected.

248 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Regular focal mollusciciding is likely to contribute significantly to the move toward elimination of schistosomiasis in high risk areas, and its impact on local transmission is typically strong, albeit incomplete.
Abstract: Background Programs for schistosomiasis control are advancing worldwide, with many benefits noted in terms of disease reduction. Yet risk of reinfection and recurrent disease remain, even in areas with high treatment coverage. In the search for means to better prevent new Schistosoma infections, attention has returned to an older strategy for transmission control, i.e., chemical mollusciciding, to suppress intermediate host snail species responsible for S. mansoni and S. haematobium transmission. The objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to summarize prior experience in molluscicide-based control of Bulinus and Biomphalaria spp. snails, and estimate its impact on local human Schistosoma infection. Methodology/Principal Findings The review was registered at inception with PROSPERO (CRD42013006869). Studies were identified by online database searches and hand searches of private archives. Eligible studies included published or unpublished mollusciciding field trials performed before January 2014 involving host snails for S. mansoni or S. haematobium, with a primary focus on the use of niclosamide. Among 63 included papers, there was large variability in terms of molluscicide dosing, and treatment intervals varied from 3–52 weeks depending on location, water source, and type of application. Among 35 studies reporting on prevalence, random effects meta-analysis indicated that, on average, odds of infection were reduced 77% (OR 0.23, CI95% 0.17, 0.31) during the course of mollusciciding, with increased impact if combined with drug therapy, and progressively greater impact over time. In 17 studies reporting local incidence, risk of new infection was reduced 64% (RR 0.36 CI95% 0.25, 0.5), but additional drug treatment did not appear to influence incidence effects. Conclusion/Significance While there are hurdles to implementing molluscicide control, its impact on local transmission is typically strong, albeit incomplete. Based on past experience, regular focal mollusciciding is likely to contribute significantly to the move toward elimination of schistosomiasis in high risk areas.

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that widespread poverty, the rural environment, and weak socioeconomic differentiation that result in intense contact with infective water appear to minimize the protective effect of piped water supply and other socioeconomic parameters on schistosomiasis found in other studies.

83 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present ideas for modernizing and scaling up snail control, including spatiotemporal targeting, environmental diagnostics, better molluscicides, new technologies (e.g., gene drive), and "outside the box" strategies such as natural enemies, traps, and repellants.

76 citations