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Dive into the research topics where Chad MacArthur is active.

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Featured researches published by Chad MacArthur.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013

Integration of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene for the Prevention and Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases: A Rationale for Inter-Sectoral Collaboration

Matthew C. Freeman; Stephanie Ogden; Julie Jacobson; Daniel Abbott; David G. Addiss; Asrat G. Amnie; Colin Beckwith; Sandy Cairncross; Rafael Callejas; Jack M. Colford; Paul M. Emerson; Alan Fenwick; Rebecca Fishman; Kerry Gallo; Jack E. T. Grimes; Gagik Karapetyan; Brooks Keene; Patrick J. Lammie; Chad MacArthur; Peter Lochery; Helen Petach; Jennifer Platt; Sarina Prabasi; Jan Willem Rosenboom; Sharon L. Roy; Darren Saywell; Lisa Schechtman; Anupama Tantri; Yael Velleman; Juerg Utzinger

Improvements of water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure and appropriate health-seeking behavior are necessary for achieving sustained control, elimination, or eradication of many neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Indeed, the global strategies to fight NTDs include provision of WASH, but few programs have specific WASH targets and approaches. Collaboration between disease control programs and stakeholders in WASH is a critical next step. A group of stakeholders from the NTD control, child health, and WASH sectors convened in late 2012 to discuss opportunities for, and barriers to, collaboration. The group agreed on a common vision, namely “Disease-free communities that have adequate and equitable access to water and sanitation, and that practice good hygiene.” Four key areas of collaboration were identified, including (i) advocacy, policy, and communication; (ii) capacity building and training; (iii) mapping, data collection, and monitoring; and (iv) research. We discuss strategic opportunities and ways forward for enhanced collaboration between the WASH and the NTD sectors.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2015

The Global Trachoma Mapping Project: Methodology of a 34-Country Population-Based Study

Anthony W. Solomon; Alexandre L. Pavluck; Paul Courtright; Agatha Aboe; Liknaw Adamu; Wondu Alemayehu; Menbere Alemu; Neal Alexander; Amir Bedri Kello; Berhanu Bero; Simon Brooker; Brian K. Chu; Michael Dejene; Paul M. Emerson; Rebecca M. Flueckiger; Solomon Gadisa; Katherine Gass; Teshome Gebre; Zelalem Habtamu; Erik Harvey; Dominic Haslam; Jonathan D. King; Richard Le Mesurier; Susan Lewallen; Thomas M. Lietman; Chad MacArthur; Silvio P Mariotti; Anna Massey; Els Mathieu; Addis Mekasha

ABSTRACT Purpose: To complete the baseline trachoma map worldwide by conducting population-based surveys in an estimated 1238 suspected endemic districts of 34 countries. Methods: A series of national and sub-national projects owned, managed and staffed by ministries of health, conduct house-to-house cluster random sample surveys in evaluation units, which generally correspond to “health district” size: populations of 100,000–250,000 people. In each evaluation unit, we invite all residents aged 1 year and older from h households in each of c clusters to be examined for clinical signs of trachoma, where h is the number of households that can be seen by 1 team in 1 day, and the product h × c is calculated to facilitate recruitment of 1019 children aged 1–9 years. In addition to individual-level demographic and clinical data, household-level water, sanitation and hygiene data are entered into the purpose-built LINKS application on Android smartphones, transmitted to the Cloud, and cleaned, analyzed and ministry-of-health-approved via a secure web-based portal. The main outcome measures are the evaluation unit-level prevalence of follicular trachoma in children aged 1–9 years, prevalence of trachomatous trichiasis in adults aged 15 + years, percentage of households using safe methods for disposal of human feces, and percentage of households with proximate access to water for personal hygiene purposes. Results: In the first year of fieldwork, 347 field teams commenced work in 21 projects in 7 countries. Conclusion: With an approach that is innovative in design and scale, we aim to complete baseline mapping of trachoma throughout the world in 2015.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

Implementing Preventive Chemotherapy through an Integrated National Neglected Tropical Disease Control Program in Mali

Massitan Dembele; Sanoussi Bamani; Robert Dembelé; Mamadou Oumar Traore; Seydou Goita; Mamadou Namory Traoré; Abdoul Karim Sidibe; Letitia Sam; Marjon Tuinsma; Emily Toubali; Chad MacArthur; Shawn K. Baker; Yaobi Zhang

Background Mali is endemic for all five targeted major neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). As one of the five ‘fast-track’ countries supported with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) funds, Mali started to integrate the activities of existing disease-specific national control programs on these diseases in 2007. The ultimate objectives are to eliminate lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis and trachoma as public health problems and to reduce morbidity caused by schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis through regular treatment to eligible populations, and the specific objectives were to achieve 80% program coverage and 100% geographical coverage yearly. The paper reports on the implementation of the integrated mass drug administration and the lessons learned. Methodology/Principal Findings The integrated control program was led by the Ministry of Health and coordinated by the national NTD Control Program. The drug packages were designed according to the disease endemicity in each district and delivered through various platforms to eligible populations involving the primary health care system. Treatment data were recorded and reported by the community drug distributors. After a pilot implementation of integrated drug delivery in three regions in 2007, the treatment for all five targeted NTDs was steadily scaled up to 100% geographical coverage by 2009, and program coverage has since been maintained at a high level: over 85% for lymphatic filariasis, over 90% for onchocerciasis and soil-transmitted helminthiasis, around 90% in school-age children for schistosomiasis, and 76–97% for trachoma. Around 10 million people have received one or more drug packages each year since 2009. No severe cases of adverse effects were reported. Conclusions/Significance Mali has scaled up the drug treatment to national coverage through integrated drug delivery involving the primary health care system. The successes and lessons learned in Mali can be valuable assets to other countries starting up their own integrated national NTD control programs.


International Health | 2011

Neglected tropical disease control in post-war Sierra Leone using the Onchocerciasis Control Programme as a platform

Mary E. Hodges; Joseph B. Koroma; Mustapha Sonnie; Ngozi Kennedy; Emily Cotter; Chad MacArthur

Strategic investments in the control of neglected tropical diseases (NTD) spearheaded by the US Government, the British Government and other bilateral donors such as foundations and key pharmaceutical partners have enabled the treatment of millions of people for the five targeted debilitating diseases (lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted helminthiasis and trachoma), paving the way for the potential elimination as public health problems of some of these diseases. Like many other countries, Sierra Leone has a high burden of these major NTDs. Despite the fragile infrastructure of a health system emerging from a devastating 10-year civil war, the country has successfully implemented the National NTD Control Programme, reaching national coverage in 2010. The NTD Control Programme uses the existing Onchocerciasis Control Programme as a platform and involves primary health workers. The programme has provided extensive training opportunities to health workers at national, district and community levels. The country currently has 31 161 trained community volunteers treating a population of five million people. It is shown that the investments in NTD control are not only to control NTDs but also to strengthen health systems, particularly at the primary level, through extensive capacity building of frontline health workers and community-directed distributors.


Health Education Research | 2007

Evaluating a school-based trachoma curriculum in Tanzania

Susan Lewallen; Patrick Massae; Manisha Tharaney; Margareth Somba; Robert Geneau; Chad MacArthur; Paul Courtright

Trachoma remains a public health problem in a number of sub-Saharan Africa countries; behavioral change and environmental improvements are cornerstones of prevention efforts. Evidence of successful health education are few in Africa. Health education efforts through primary schools have recently been developed and adopted in Tanzania. We evaluated changes from 2004 to 2005 in knowledge and reported behavioral change as well as nasal and ocular discharge and clean faces in selected schools in central Tanzania. This was a mixed-methods study involving both schoolchildren and school teachers. We found a significant reduction in nasal discharge (from 4.5% to 0.5%) and dirty faces (from 3.6% to 0.9%) and improvements in some knowledge- and behavior-related indices by primary schoolchildren in the intervention villages. The teachers viewed the trachoma curriculum positively but reported that the lack of water at the schools limited application of the health education messages. The disparity between health education messages and environmental capacities for implementing these messages (no wells at the schools and minimal latrine facilities at the schools and homes) limited usefulness of the curriculum.


BMC Medicine | 2012

The role of nutrition in integrated programs to control neglected tropical diseases

Andrew Hall; Yaobi Zhang; Chad MacArthur; Shawn K. Baker

There are strong and direct relationships between undernutrition and the disease caused by infectious organisms, including the diverse pathogens labeled as neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Undernutrition increases the risk of infection, the severity of disease and the risk that children will die, while the physical damage, loss of appetite, and host responses during chronic infection can contribute substantially to undernutrition. These relationships are often synergistic. This opinion article examines the role of nutrition in controlling NTDs and makes the point that mass drug treatment - the major strategy currently proposed to control several diseases - is crucial to controlling disease and transmission, but is only the start of the process of physical recovery. Without adequate energy and nutrients to repair damaged tissues or recover lost growth and development, the benefits of treatment may not be evident quickly; the effects of control programs may be not appreciated by beneficiaries; while vulnerability to reinfection and disease may not be reduced. There is substantial potential for nutritional interventions to be added to large-scale programs to deliver drug treatments and thereby contribute, within a broad strategy of public health interventions and behavior change activities, to controlling and preventing NTDs in populations, and to restoring their health.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2011

The epidemiology of trachoma in the five northern districts of Sierra Leone.

Joseph B. Koroma; Emily Heck; Matthew Vandy; Mustapha Sonnie; Mary H. Hodges; Chad MacArthur; Dieudonne Sankara

Purpose: In 2008, a trachoma prevalence survey was conducted in the five northern districts of Sierra Leone to determine if and where specific components of the SAFE strategy (Surgery, Antibiotics, Face washing, Environmental change) should be initiated. Methods: A cross-sectional survey at district level was implemented using two-stage random cluster sampling: probability proportionate sampling was used to select villages in the first stage and compact segment sampling of households in the second stage. Both eyes of 16,780 individuals were examined using the World Health Organization simplified trachoma grading system. Data were also collected on village- and household-level behavior and environmental factors related to trachoma. Results: Prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF) in children aged 1–9 years was highest in Kambia at 3.52% (95% Confidence Interval (CI): 2.28–4.75%), while the prevalence of trachomatous trichiasis (TT) in persons over 15 years of age was highest in Port Loko at 0.27% (95% CI: 0.03–0.50%). Across all districts, the percentage of households reporting washing children’s faces less than once per day was very low, while latrine coverage and accessible and safe water sources were not highly prevalent. Conclusions: In all districts but Koinadugu, TT prevalence was greater than the WHO elimination threshold, indicating the need for 1,016 TT surgeries to prevent blindness. District TF prevalence rates did not warrant mass antibiotic distribution. Although not required given the low prevalence of TF, we recommend the construction of 35,941 household latrines and provision of water sources within a 30-minute walk roundtrip for 17,551 households to bring Sierra Leone closer to reaching Millennium Development Goal 7.


Health Education Research | 2013

Enhancing community knowledge and health behaviors to eliminate blinding trachoma in Mali using radio messaging as a strategy

Sanoussi Bamani; Emily Toubali; Sadio Diarra; Seydou Goita; Zana Berté; Famolo Coulibaly; Hama Sangaré; Marjon Tuinsma; Yaobi Zhang; Benoit Dembele; Palesa Melvin; Chad MacArthur

The National Blindness Prevention Program in Mali has broadcast messages on the radio about trachoma as part of the countrys trachoma elimination strategy since 2008. In 2011, a radio impact survey using multi-stage cluster sampling was conducted in the regions of Kayes and Segou to assess radio listening habits, coverage of the broadcasts, community knowledge and behavior specific to trachoma and facial cleanliness of children. Radio access and listening were high, with 60% of respondents having heard a message on the radio about trachoma. The majority of respondents knew about trachoma, its root causes, its impact on health and prevention measures. Additionally, 66% reported washing their childrens faces more than or equal to twice/day and 94% reported latrine disposal of feces. A high percentage of persons who gave a positive response to knowledge and behavior questions reported hearing the trachoma messages on the radio with 60% reporting that the radio is where they learned about trachoma. There was no significant difference in facial cleanliness when comparing children whose primary caregiver had/had not heard the trachoma messages. Next steps include revising the current messages to include more focused behavior change messaging and to engage in a more robust use of community radios.


BMC Medicine | 2010

Control of neglected tropical diseases needs a long-term commitment

Yaobi Zhang; Chad MacArthur; Likezo Mubila; Shawn K. Baker


The Lancet | 2012

SAFE strategy for blinding trachoma addresses sanitation, the other half of MDG7

Paul M. Emerson; Martin Kollmann; Chad MacArthur; Simon Bush; Danny Haddad

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Yaobi Zhang

Helen Keller International

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Shawn K. Baker

Helen Keller International

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Emily Toubali

Helen Keller International

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Marjon Tuinsma

Helen Keller International

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Mustapha Sonnie

Helen Keller International

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Sanoussi Bamani

Helen Keller International

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Seydou Goita

Helen Keller International

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