RTI International/Yonas Getachew
A member of the trachoma survey team enters data into a smartphone through Tropical Data.
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Eliminating trachoma through high-quality data

National elimination of trachoma as a public health problem is defined as:

  1. less than 0.2% of ≥15-year-olds having unmanaged trachomatous trichiasis; AND
  2. less than 5% of 1-9-year-old children having the active (inflammatory) trachoma sign “TF”, in each formerly-endemic district; PLUS
  3. the existence of a system to detect and manage new cases of trachomatous trichiasis.

The first two of these criteria require reliable data on the proportion of people in a population that have trachoma, which in epidemiological terms is known as the prevalence of disease. Decisions on the need for interventions against trachoma also rely on good-quality district-level prevalence data. To help national programmes generate sound data, in consultation with the trachoma community, WHO has developed and published detailed guidance on undertaking surveys:

WHO has also created and fostered Tropical Data, a collaboration with the International Trachoma Initiative at the Task Force for Global Health; the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; RTI International; and Sightsavers, which supports national programmes to generate high-quality prevalence data by providing epidemiological, training, logistical and data management support for all types of cross-sectional surveys on trachoma. WHO provides oversight on survey protocols and ensures that country interests are maintained.

4 countries

as having eliminated trachoma as a public health problem using data generated through Tropical Data

1500 districts

Data generated for 1500 districts

50 countries

supported to undertake high quality prevalence surveys

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Design parameters for population-based trachoma prevalence surveys

Trachoma results from infection with particular strains of the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis, causing blindness in the world’s poorest people....

Design and validation of a trachomatous trichiasis-only survey

The Fifty-first World Health Assembly adopted resolution WHA51.11 in 1998, which targets the global elimination of trachoma as a public health problem...

Validation of elimination of trachoma as a public health problem

In 1998, the Fifty-first World Health Assembly adopted resolution WHA51.11 on the global elimination of blinding trachoma. For equivalent targets for other...

Trachoma control: a guide for programme managers

Trachoma is an infectious eye disease that causes blindness; it is prevalent in many poor rural communities. The World Health Organization has set the...

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