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Community-based Guinea worm surveillance in Chad: Evaluating a system at the intersection of human and animal disease.

Beth L RubensteinSharon L RoyKarmen UnterwegnerSarah YerianAdam WeissHubert ZirimwabagaboElisabeth ChopMario RomeroPhilip Tchindebet OuakouTchonfienet MoundaiSarah Anne J Guagliardo
Published in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2021)
Community volunteers play crucial roles in educating their neighbors about Guinea worm and facilitating surveillance. Additional training and more attentive management of volunteers and supervisors could increase visit frequency and further amplify their impact. Emphasizing links between animal and human cases, the importance of animal containment, and animal rewards might improve surveillance and canine case detection. The surveillance system should be evaluated routinely to expand generalizability of data and monitor changes over time.
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