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CLOSE THIS BOOKFact sheet No 259: African Trypanosomiasis or Sleeping Sickness - March 2001 (WHO, 2001, 4 p.)
VIEW THE DOCUMENT(introduction...)
VIEW THE DOCUMENTDefinition of the disease
VIEW THE DOCUMENTAnimal trypanosomiasis
VIEW THE DOCUMENTMajor epidemics
VIEW THE DOCUMENTThe Geographical distribution of the disease
VIEW THE DOCUMENTInfection and symptoms
VIEW THE DOCUMENTCase management
VIEW THE DOCUMENTTreatment
VIEW THE DOCUMENTFirst phase treatments
VIEW THE DOCUMENTSecond phase treatments
VIEW THE DOCUMENTThe Role of the World Health Organization

Major epidemics

There have been three severe epidemics in Africa over the last century: one between 1896 and 1906, mostly in Uganda and the Congo Basin, one in 1920 in several African countries, and one that began in 1970 and is still in progress. The 1920 epidemic was arrested due to mobile teams systematically screening millions of people at risk. The disease had practically disappeared between 1960 and 1965. After that success, screening and effective surveillance were relaxed, and the disease has reappeared in endemic form in several foci over the last thirty years.

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