Niger just announced its elimination of river blindness. In 1976, the disease had a prevalence rate in the country of 60%.
Africa is a beautiful continent, surrounded with deserts jungles, forest and rivers which is at the heart of this lively ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) has recognised the efforts of Niger, a country in West Africa, in eliminating onchocerciasis-- also known as 'river blindness' -- a parasitic disease caused by a ...
In a small village in Niger’s Tahoua region, an 80-year-old man sits in the shade, his eyes clouded by irreversible blindness. His wife, in her 70s, sits nearby, her body covered in scars beneath her ...
The country’s elimination marks a milestone in Africa’s fight to control and end the disease, the second-leading infectious cause of blindness worldwide.
River blindness is spread to humans ... the agency's director for Africa. The WHO said a key factor in Niger's success was the collaboration between the government, the WHO and non-governmental ...
Programmes to eliminate neglected tropical diseases, like river blindness and trachoma (pictured), do more than just restore health - Simon Townsley ...
Listeners swayed as the celebrated Malian duo Amadou and Mariam sang from a stage on the banks of the Niger River at an ...
Onchocerciasis, commonly known as river blindness ... umbrella of the WHO Onchocerciasis Control Programme in West Africa (OCP), Niger undertook vector control measures by spraying insecticides ...