Mexico Eliminates Infectious Disease Which Is Leading Cause of Blindness

Authored by nbcnews.com and submitted by maxwellhill
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In a significant public health victory, Mexico has succeeded in eliminating a disease which is the leading cause of blindness worldwide.

The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and the World Health Organization (WHO) announced Monday that Mexico is the first country in the Americas to eliminate trachoma as a public health issue. The disease, caused by a bacteria, affects the eye and repeated infections can lead to scarring and even loss of vision.

It primarily affects young children, and can be spread by personal contact or by flies that that have been in contact with the discharge from the eyes or nose of an infected person.

"This is a historic moment for public health in Mexico and the Americas," said Carissa F. Etienne, Director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), WHO regional office for the Americas. "Eliminating a disease is not achieved every day."

Trachoma primarily affects poor and isolated populations in 41 countries; in the Americas, the disease is still prevalent in Brazil, Guatemala, and Colombia.

Mexico has become the third country, after Oman and Morocco, to receive WHO validation for eliminating the disease.

Related: Measles Has Been Eliminated in the Americas, WHO Says

In Mexico, trachoma affected over 146,000 people. The country ramped up its actions in 2004 with the creation of the Trachoma Prevention and Control Program of the Ministry of Health of Chiapas and the strengthening of the WHO SAFE strategy. The "Trachoma Brigades" focused on cleanliness, antibiotics, environmental improvement and surgery for the advanced stage of the disease.

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The program's slogan was "With water, soap and cleanliness you can prevent trachoma." Teachers at schools would also meet with parents regularly to promote better hygiene.

The international criteria for the elimination of trachoma as a public health problem includes prevalence of less than 5 percent in children aged 1 to 9, and less than one case of trachomatous trichiasis (inverted eyelashes) per 1,000 inhabitants.

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Em_Adespoton on April 25th, 2017 at 19:02 UTC »

In that article, it states that Mexico is the first country in the Americas to eliminate the disease. It then later states that it is one of three countries in the world to have eliminated it.

This makes me wonder: does Tracoma even exist in northern countries? I've never heard of it in the US, Canada and Northern Europe. Considering how it spreads, it would seem to be more of a problem in areas with inadequate sanitation faclities and in areas with large volumes of small flies and people (places closer to the equator).

puesyomero on April 25th, 2017 at 17:59 UTC »

here's​ hoping tracoma goes the way of smallpox.

appleburger17 on April 25th, 2017 at 15:36 UTC »

They've stopped the masturbators?!?