Emerging Infectious Diseases (May 2020)

Surveillance of Leprosy in Kiribati, 1935–2017

  • Stephen T. Chambers,
  • Nabura Ioteba,
  • Eretii Timeon,
  • Erei Rimon,
  • Helen Murdoch,
  • Jared Green,
  • Emma Trowbridge,
  • Jane Buckingham,
  • Arturo Cunanan,
  • Jonathan Williman,
  • Patricia Priest

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2605.181746
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 5
pp. 833 – 840

Abstract

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In Kiribati, unlike most countries, high and increasing numbers of cases of leprosy have been reported despite the availability of multidrug therapy and efforts to improve case finding and management. Historic records show that 28 cases had been identified by 1925. A systematic population survey in 1997 identified 135 new cases; the mean incidence rate for 1993–1997 was 7.4/10,000 population. After administering mass chemoprophylaxis, the country reached the elimination threshold (prevalence 20/10,000 population) in the main population centers of South Tarawa and Betio. Spread is expected to continue in areas where crowding and poor socioeconomic conditions persist and may accelerate as sea levels rise from climate change. New initiatives to improve social conditions are needed, and efforts such as postexposure chemoprophylaxis should be implemented to prevent spread.

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