Afar Trachoma project, Ethiopia

Ethiopia is one of the poorest nations in the world and the Afar region in the north-east is by far the most disadvantaged and under-resourced area of the country.  For a population of 1.3 million there are only two health facilities, a 7% literacy rate and fewer than 10% of the population has access to safe water.

Trachoma is a contagious eye disease and the world’s leading cause of preventable blindness. It is spread from person to person via hands, clothing or flies and, as a result, occurs in clusters, affecting entire families and communities. This affects the economic well-being of the family as it occurs during the most productive years of their lives.

In the Afar region the rate of trachoma infection is particularly high, around 50%. This is because communities in the region suffer from a lack of clean water and poor hygiene practices. Compounding this situation there are only two trained primary eye care workers in the whole region.

Aims

To implement the SAFE strategy – Surgery for trichiasis, Antibiotics for the active disease, Face washing and Environmental sanitation:

  • To improve health education, awareness and promotion of trachoma prevention practices
  • Increase access to clean water and sanitation
  • Increase facial cleanliness, particularly for children
  • Treating 80% of the backlog of cases through surgery
  • Treat 700,000 people with antibiotics

Achievements

  • Local surgeons trained to perform surgery; over 1,000 operations performed so far
  • Local nurses trained to provide eye health care
  • Wells and boreholes for clean water, and sanitary latrines constructed
  • Antibiotics made available and widely distributed
  • Sanitation and hygiene education being delivered in schools through trachoma and sanitation clubs, and in the village through ‘village hygiene promoters’

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