Login / Signup

Estimating the number of cases of podoconiosis in Ethiopia using geostatistical methods.

Kebede DeribeJorge CanoEmanuele GiorgiDavid M PigottNick GoldingRachel L PullanAbdisalan M NoorElizabeth A CromwellAaron Osgood-ZimmermanFikre EnquselassieAsrat HailuChristopher J L MurrayMelanie J NewportSimon J BrookerSimon I HayGail Davey
Published in: Wellcome open research (2017)
Podoconiosis is endemic in 345 districts in Ethiopia: 144 in Oromia, 128 in Southern Nations, Nationalities and People's [SNNP], 64 in Amhara, 4 in Benishangul Gumuz, 4 in Tigray and 1 in Somali Regional State. Nationally, our estimates suggest that 1,537,963 adults (95% confidence intervals, 290,923-4,577,031 adults) were living with podoconiosis in 2015. Three regions (SNNP, Oromia and Amhara) contributed 99% of the cases. The highest proportion of individuals with podoconiosis resided in the SNNP (39%), while 32% and 29% of people with podoconiosis resided in Oromia and Amhara Regional States, respectively. Tigray and Benishangul Gumuz Regional States bore lower burdens, and in the remaining regions, podoconiosis was almost non-existent.  Discussion: The estimates of podoconiosis cases presented here based upon the combination of currently available epidemiological data and a robust modelling approach clearly show that podoconiosis is highly endemic in Ethiopia. Given the presence of low cost prevention, and morbidity management and disability prevention services, it is our collective responsibility to scale-up interventions rapidly.
Keyphrases
  • low cost
  • big data
  • artificial intelligence
  • health insurance