Sightsavers Logo
Research centre
  • Home
  • About us
  • Research approach
  • Research studies and publications
  • Evidence gap maps
Join in:
  • Join in: Facebook
  • Join in: Twitter
  • Join in: Instagram
  • Join in: LinkedIn
  • Join in: YouTube
  • Global
  • Close search bar
    Donate
    • Home
    • About us
    • Research approach
    • Research studies and publications
    • Evidence gap maps
    Publication

    Epidemiology of trachoma and its implications for implementing the “SAFE” strategy in Somali Region, Ethiopia: results of 14 population-based prevalence surveys

    Journal: Ophthalmic Epidemiology

    Summary

    The purpose of this study undertaken in 2013, was to determine whether the prevalence of trachoma in Ethiopia’s Somali Region is a public health problem requiring intervention. Cross-sectional community-based surveys were conducted in 34 suspected trachoma-endemic woredas, grouped as 14 evaluation units (EUs), using the standardised mapping methodology of the Global Trachoma Mapping Project.

    The results concluded that mass drug administration with azithromycin is needed in 13 EUs. In all 13 of these EUs, implementation of facial cleanliness and environmental improvement measures is also needed. The prevalence of TT was above the WHO elimination threshold of 0.2% in 10 EUs. Surveys are still needed in the remaining 34 unmapped woredas of Somali Region.

    Read the journal article

    Related tags

    Ethiopia
    Trachoma
    Eye health
    Publication details
    Date published
    11 September 2019
    Journal
    Ophthalmic Epidemiology
    Countries
    Ethiopia
    Themes/conditions
    Trachoma
    Eye health
    Publication details
    Date published
    11 September 2019
    Journal
    Ophthalmic Epidemiology
    Countries
    Ethiopia
    Themes/conditions
    Trachoma
    Eye health

    Related publications

    Publication

    Trachoma

    Publication

    Tropical Data: supporting health ministries worldwide to conduct high-quality trachoma surveys

    Publication

    Potential mitigating role of ivermectin on the spread of chlamydia trachomatis by Musca sorbens

    Sightsavers Logo
    Research centre
    • Join in:
    • Join in: Facebook
    • Join in: X
    • Join in: Instagram
    • Join in: LinkedIn
    • Join in: YouTube

    Protecting sight, fighting disease and promoting equality for all

  • Accessibility
  • Sightsavers homepage
  • Our policies
  • Media centre
  • Contact us
  • Jobs
  • Cookies and privacy Terms and conditions Modern slavery statement Safeguarding

    © 2025 by Sightsavers, Inc., Business Address for all correspondence: One Boston Place, Suite 2600, Boston, MA 02108.

    Our website uses cookies

    To make sure you have a great experience on our site, we’d like your consent to use cookies. These will collect anonymous statistics to personalise your experience.

    Manage preferences

    You have the option to enable non-essential cookies, which will help us enhance your experience and improve our website.

    Essential cookiesAlways on

    These enable our site to work correctly, for example by storing page settings. You can disable these by changing your browser settings, but some parts of our website will not work as expected.

    Analytics cookies

    To improve our website, we’d like to collect anonymous data about how you use the site, such as which pages you read, the device you’re using, and whether your visit includes a donation. This is completely anonymous, and is never used to profile individual visitors.

    Advertising cookies

    To raise awareness about our work, we’d like to show you Sightsavers adverts as you browse the web. By accepting these cookies, our advertising partners may use anonymous information to show you our adverts on other websites you visit. If you do not enable advertising cookies, you will still see adverts on other websites, but they may be less relevant to you. For info, see the Google Ads privacy policy.