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Ground Zero: Amhara, Ethiopia

“The predeterminants of trachoma are poverty, which manifests as poor access to sanitation, poor access to hygiene, high density living conditions, and a general poor health. All of those go together, then trachoma gets laid on top of it.  It used to be the slums of London, now it’s the rural areas of populous countries, like Ethiopia.” - Dr. Paul Emerson, director of The Carter Center Trachoma Control Program
  • Ethiopia has the highest proportion of people at risk of getting trachoma (85% of its population, about 65 million people)
  • Ethiopia has the greatest number of people in the final, blinding stage of trachoma (more than 1 million)
  • Ethiopia has the greatest number of people who have gone blind from trachoma (138,000)
Map by Golbez, under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Map by Golbez, under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

The Carter Center has launched trachoma control programs in Ghana, Mali, Niger, Sudan and Nigeria, but its most challenging location is Ethiopia.  The Ethiopia program began in 2001, in partnership with the federal Ministry of Health and the Lions Clubs of Ethiopia.  It has focused its efforts on the country’s most affected region: the northwestern state of Amhara.  Two thirds of its work there has been funded by money raised by the Lions Clubs of Ethiopia, through the Lions Clubs International Foundation.  The antibiotic it has distributed, Zithromax, has all been donated by Pfizer.  The Center aims to effectively control trachoma in the region by 2012.

Amhara: Ground Zero

  • Amhara accounts for roughly 20% of Ethiopia’s population.
  • Amhara carries 45% of the country’s trachoma burden.

More than 85% of Amhara’s 17 million people live in rural areas, situated in the mountainous highlands.  They are overwhelmingly subsistence farmers, growing teff, a grain that is used to make injera, a spongy, flat bread typically served with Ethiopian meals.

The Amhara region of Ethiopia

The Amhara region of Ethiopia

In Ethiopia, Amhara has the highest rate of active trachoma in children aged 1-9 (62%), and the highest rate of adults who have reached the final, blinding stage of trachoma (5.2%).  The prevalence is attributed mainly to the area’s poverty, poor access to water, and poor sanitation.  Families live in small huts, crowding a small space in which it’s easy for disease to spread from children to the parents. And in some areas of the rural mountains, mothers or children have to walk hours to get water, and then lug it back home.  After cooking, drinking, and feeding the animals, there often isn’t enough left to wash hands, or children’s faces.  This contributes to the spread of trachoma.

The other major contributing factor in Amhara is the presence of swarming flies, Musca sorbens, that thrive in places of poor sanitation.  The flies like to breed in outdoor human stool, and they feed off of discharge around the eyes and nose. As they feed, they transmit the microorganism that infects they eyes with trachoma, from one person to the next.  Sanitation facilities have historically been lacking in Amhara — another effect of the region’s poverty.  Since 2003, however, hundreds of thousands of household latrines have been built with the help of The Carter Center and other development groups.  The country’s Health Extension Program has also incorporated latrine-building into the educational mission of its rural health workers.


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3 Responses to “Ground Zero: Amhara, Ethiopia”

  1. Jeannie Ericson says:

    Great series! Is there any intersection between trachoma and AIDS? wondering given the high rate of AIDS in this region if those with AIDS are more susceptible. Does the presence of AIDS exacerbate the trachoma problem?

  2. I’m so glad I found this site…Keep up the good work

  3. Great site…keep up the good work.