WHO releases the Global Report on Neglected Tropical Diseases 2024

The document describes progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals set for 2030, a road map for neglected tropical diseases. Regarding Chagas disease, those goals are still very far except for vectorial transmission.

13 May 2024

 

"In view of the upcoming 77th session of the World Health Assembly (WHA77), which will take place in Geneva on 27 May–1 June 2024, the World Health Organization (WHO) has released its Global report on neglected tropical diseases 2024.
 
The report provides Member States and the global community of partners with an account on progress made in 2023 towards the implementation of the Road map for neglected tropical diseases 2021–2030. Notably, the progress report is one of the agenda items included in the WHA77 agenda.
 
'With a renewed focus on strategic priorities addressing advocacy for action, partnership, costing and accelerated implementation, technical gaps including R&D and leadership, we must intensify our collective action to address the deep-rooted inequalities that fuel the transmission of NTDs in the populations where they persist´ said Dr Ibrahima Socé Fall, Director, WHO Global Neglected Tropical Diseases Programme.
 
The Global report on neglected tropical diseases 2024 highlights encouraging advancements in the battle against NTDs.
 

 

Regarding Chagas diseases there are 5 indicators to measure the progress towards specific objectives:
 
  1. 37% of countries achieving interruption of transmission through the four transmission routes in 2030.
  2. 86% of countries achieving interruption of domiciliary vector transmission
  3. 100% of countries achieving interruption of transfusional transmission
  4. 100% of countries achieving interruption of organ transplantation transmission
  5. 37% of countries achieving interruption of vertical transmission
 
Progress has been made mainly in number 2 (vector transmission). In 2023, “ten Latin American countries have been verified for interruption of domiciliary vector transmission in the whole national territory or a portion of it. An additional group of countries have interrupted vectorial transmission by the principal triatomine bug, in the whole national territory or in a portion of it”. This is more than the expected milestone for 2023, reaching the 48% of targeted countries.
 
On the contrary, for the other 4 indicators, there is no equivalent progress. However, according to the report, “several countries are regularly screening both organ donors and receivers and no new cases of infection have been reported to WHO for the past 3 years”. Regarding the elimination of transmission of congenital Chagas disease, some countries are implementing the screening and antiparasitic treatment of girls and women of childbearing age with T. cruzi infection, or screening of pregnant women and antiparasitic treatment of newborns and siblings. The region of Murcia, a first administrative division of Spain, is the first territory to claim to have achieved sustained interruption of congenital transmission over the past 7 years.
 
The report also highlights the impact of the Chagas Disease World Day (April 14th) which put the disease in the global health map as well as the participation and contribution of alignments between health sectors and civil society groups, implementation partners, producers and research organizations. There is a special mention to the more than 30 patient’s associations distributed among the Americas, European and the Western Pacific regions, under the umbrella of the International Federation of Associations of People Affected by Chagas disease (FINDECHAGAS).
 
The global report highlights key challenges, ranging from a slow post-COVID-19 recovery to funding uncertainties, from geopolitical disruptions to climate change, from gaps in knowledge and tools to insufficient data, to illustrate the complexities inherent in addressing NTDs.

 

Read the official new by the World Health Organization HERE.

 

 


#IWearTheTShirt of the World Chagas Disease Day

03 April 2023

 
5th EDITION OF WORLD CHAGAS DISEASE DAY – 14 April 2024
 
 
 
Spot for the World Chagas Day 2023
 
 
With a simple gesture, you can support the visibility of the fight against Chagas disease. Wear the World Chagas Day T-shirt and upload it to your social networks with the hashtags #IWearTheTShirt of the World Chagas Disease Day or #MePongoLaCamiseta del día Mundial de Chagas. Share it. And if you know influencers in the world of scientific communication, sports or culture, do not hesitate to ask them for their support to wear the T-shirt and upload it to their networks.
 
This T-shirt has the color of hope and earth, the color of a tree trunk and its leaves. It is the symbol of hope with its feet on the ground, as chosen by the associations of affected people. The logo printed on it also represents the whole community involved in this problem.
 
Little by little, we are populating the networks with the Chagas Day T-shirt.
 
If you wish to screen print the t-shirt locally in large quantities, you can do it in white or any other format that is economical. But if it is possible for you to do it in the original green and brown model we encourage you to do it. If you need the design, order it on our website or through the Beatchagas website (at the addresses below).


 

Contact us to request t-shirt design:

comunicacion@coalicionchagas.org
 
For more information: https://beatchagas.info/

#IWearTheTShirt #PonteLaCamiseta #MePongoLaCamiseta #DíaMundialChagas #BeatNTDs

Chagas Disease

For control and universal access to treatment

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