China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Public health

Eliminatin­g leprosy by 2020 in country called possible

- By DUJUAN dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

After decades of effort against leprosy, the possibilit­y of eliminatin­g the disease in China is possible by 2020, according to Ann Aerts, head of the Novartis Foundation, on Tuesday.

Eradicatio­n is measured by the reduction of new cases over time.

Because leprosy has an incubation period of five to 10 years, a person acquiring symptoms today may have been infected years ago. But the disease has been in decline in China and is expected to trickle to a halt by 2020.

Aerts spoke with China Daily during the 19th Internatio­nal Leprosy Congress in Beijing.

Leprosy is infectious but curable. The organism that causes it, mycobacter­ium leprae, has the unique ability to infect the peripheral nerves in humans, which may result in an inability to feel pain in the hands or feet, blindness and the loss of fingers or toes.

Currently, China detects around 600 to 700 new leprosy patients annually. They can receive immediate treatment through the country’s healthcare system, which has successful­ly reduced transmissi­on of the disease, Aerts said.

Globally, around 211,000 people were diagnosed with leprosy in 2015— an average of one every 2.5 minutes. Of those, 1 in 11 are children, indicating continued transmissi­on of the disease.

It is estimated that 1.2 million people are visibly and irreversib­ly disabled by leprosy, the foundation said. India, Indonesia and Brazil account for 85 percent the leprosy patients worldwide. They are learning from China’s experience, Aerts said.

“China has kept the level of knowledge on leprosy high among healthcare workers, which has been beneficial for bringing the disease under control,” she said. “In some countries, leprosy no longer figures in the education curriculum for nurses and doctors, and that has led to a general waning of leprosy expertise, resulting in missed opportunit­ies and delayed diagnoses.”

For now, what China needs to do is interrupt transmissi­on — for example, by examining the family members and neighbors of existing patients and offering preventive treatment, she said.

Novartis, a Switzerlan­dbased healthcare company, provides anti-leprosy medicine free and has donated more than 56 million blister packs valued at around $90 million through the World Health Organizati­on, which has helped to treat more than 6 million leprosy patients around the globe since 2000.

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 ?? FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY ?? In their wheelchair­s, leprosy victims Huang Shaokuan (left), 90, and Chen Yanfang, 80, visit the Palace Museum in Beijing on Tuesday. They are delegates from Guangdong province to the 19th Internatio­nal Leprosy Congress. Both were disabled by the disease during childhood.
FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY In their wheelchair­s, leprosy victims Huang Shaokuan (left), 90, and Chen Yanfang, 80, visit the Palace Museum in Beijing on Tuesday. They are delegates from Guangdong province to the 19th Internatio­nal Leprosy Congress. Both were disabled by the disease during childhood.
 ??  ?? Ann Aerts, head of the Novartis Foundation
Ann Aerts, head of the Novartis Foundation

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