Resultados y conclusiones de un taller en prevención de Chagas en Brasilia (In Spanish)


Get Connected

Vimeo
Vimeo
RSS Feed
PAHO's Communities
Home HOME

Resultados y conclusiones de un taller en prevención de Chagas en Brasilia (In Spanish)

Resultados y conclusiones de un taller en prevención de Chagas en Brasilia (In Spanish)Brasilia, Brazil, June 8 2012 -  Se llevó a cabo, organizado por el Ministerio de Salud (MS), con cooperación técnica de OPS-Brasil entre los días 5 y 6 de junio del presente año, el Taller “Actualización conceptual del riesgo de transmisión vectorial de la Enfermedad de Chagas en Brasil” para concretar la apreciación de la actual situación de transmisión  vectorial domiciliaria de Trypanosoma cruzi en  el país. 

Participaron del  evento el Dr. Roberto Chuit de la Academia Nacional de Medicina de Argentina, reconocido experto en Chagas, el Dr. Renato Vieira Alves (Grupo Técnico de Chagas /SVS/MS), quien acompañó y coordinó todo el taller, y expertos invitados y seleccionados por el MS de Brasil, con  especialistas de FIOCRUZ, Universidad de Brasilia, y otros centros.

Dentro de este grupo  se analizó la situación desde diversas perspectivas y enfoques, y después de sostenidos intercambios y  debates,  se concluyó que: [Click here to read the Document, in Portuguese]

"Houve grande redução nas taxas de transmissão vetorial da doença de Chagas humana no País, sem que atualmente se registre uma transmissão domiciliar sustentada e contínua. O inquérito nacional de soroprevalência (2001-2008) e os dados da vigilância epidemiológica (2006-2011) demonstraram essa situação para todo território endêmico."

Conclusión que para toda el área endémica de Chagas de Brasil (excluyendo la Amazonía)  establece en relación a  la transmisión vectorial  domiciliaria  por triatominos (no solo T.infestans)  un alto grado de control.

Links

 


Last Updated on Wednesday, 27 June 2012 07:37
 

:: Neglected Infectious Disease Latest News


Honduras expands deworming of children in remote communities during vaccination campaigns

Honduras expands deworming of children in remote communities during vaccination campaignsA year ago, Cleotilde Acosta's four children were having problems sleeping and eating. “Before they received the deparasitation treatment, they would wake up frightened in the middle of the night,” recalls this mother in Santa María del Carbón, an indigenous Pech community in the municipality of San Esteban, department of Olancho, Honduras. “Now their stomachs are better, they have healthy appetites, and the ones in school are learning to read,” she adds with a grateful smile.

Read more

 

:: Neglected Infectious Diseases Video List


 
Neglected Infectious Diseases

Health Surveillance and Diseases Prevention and Control Area
Communicable Diseases Prevention and Control Project
Neglected Infectious Diseases Program

www.paho.org/neglecteddiseases

First WHO Report on Neglected Tropical Diseases

First WHO Report on Neglected Tropical Diseases 

16th Meeting of the WHO Alliance for the Global Elimination of Trachoma by 2020

Conclusions and Recommendations - GET2020

Conclusions and Recommendations - GET2020 (In Spanish)


Control and Elimination of Five Neglected Diseases in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2010 – 2015

 Control and Elimination of Five Neglected Diseases in Latin America and the Caribbean, 2010 – 2015

A Call to Action: Addressing Soil-transmitted Helminths in Latin America & the Caribbean

 

:: Contact us: NID

Regional Office for the Americas of the World Health Organization
525 Twenty-third Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037, United States of America
Tel.: +1 (202) 974-3000 Fax: +1 (202) 974-3663

Collaborating Centers
© Pan American Health Organization. All rights reserved.