Tanzania Minister of Health Ummy Mwalimu and members of the Ministry’s trachoma elimination team met Sightsavers, the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust, DFID representatives and implementing partners in Bahi District and Dodoma.
The group attended a village surgery camp where people with trichiasis, the most severe form of trachoma, were receiving sight-saving surgery. They discussed the achievements of two key trachoma programmes that are helping to control the disease in the area.
The programmes – the UK Aid-funded DFID SAFE programme and the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust’s Trachoma Initiative – have been working alongside the Tanzanian government to eliminate blinding trachoma since 2014 and 2015 respectively. Both programmes are coordinated by Sightsavers on behalf of the International Coalition for Trachoma Control.
Collectively, to date the programmes have:
Sightsavers CEO Dr Caroline Harper said: “The significant impact both programmes have made on eliminating trachoma in Tanzania is cause for celebration and is testament to the close collaboration between all those involved. Distributing treatment, training surgeons and mobilising case finders on such a large scale has only been made possible through effective partnership working, and millions of people’s lives are better as a result.”
In 2014, more than 4 million people in Tanzania were at risk of losing their sight as a result of trachoma. It was then that the DFID SAFE programme began working in the regions of Manyara, Arusha, Pwani, Lindi, Mtwara and Dodoma.
A year later, the Trust’s Trachoma Initiative set out to expand the fight against trachoma in Tanzania. Implemented by Helen Keller International, the programme works alongside the Tanzanian government and DFID to eliminate the disease in Arusha, Dodoma and Lindi.
In Africa, the Trust’s Trachoma Initiative is also supporting governments in Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Uganda and Zambia as they work towards eliminating trachoma, while DFID SAFE also works on trachoma elimination in Chad, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Zambia.
Both programmes are implementing the World Health Organization-endorsed SAFE strategy. The acronym stands for:
The Trachoma Initiative and DFID SAFE work in close collaboration with other large-scale trachoma elimination programmes, supported by members of the World Health Organization’s Alliance for Global Elimination of Trachoma by the year 2020 (GET2020) and others such as USAID, the END Fund, RTI International, The Carter Center, World Vision and the Conrad N Hilton Foundation.
The disease spreads through contact with infected flies and via hands, clothes or bedding.
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