Inherited burden of disease: agricultural dams and the persistence of bloody urine (Schistosomiasis hematobium) in the Upper East Region of Ghana, 1959–1997
A major agricultural development project was commissioned to celebrate Ghana's independence in 1957. In the Upper Region along the border with Upper Volta now named Burkina Faso, a total of 185 clay-core dams were constructed in 15 years to enhance village water supplies during the 6-month dry...
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description | A major agricultural development project was commissioned to celebrate Ghana's independence in 1957. In the Upper Region along the border with Upper Volta now named Burkina Faso, a total of 185 clay-core dams were constructed in 15 years to enhance village water supplies during the 6-month dry season. In a concentrated area of N.E. Ghana (now the Upper East Region) no fewer than 104 dams were erected in only 3 years. The beneficial impacts of the dams are indisputable, and life today would be unthinkable without them, despite severe problems of neglect of maintenance. Equally undeniable has been a negative disease impact whereby the regional rate of schistosomiasis tripled in 1 or 2 years from 17% to 51% prevalence. Thus, an agriculturally induced hyperendemicity of “red water” or “bloody urine” disease was established. To test the longevity of community disease impact, a survey of hematuria (bloody urine) was conducted in the same areas in 1997. It showed a 40-year ecological entrenchment of elevated levels of schistosomiasis, that is, seemingly permanent alteration of regional disease ecology. The consequences of planning negligence have left a generational impact in that hematuria has become a “rite of passage” for young boys and girls. Unprepared and overburdened rural health care systems are ill-equipped in the face of competing demands to respond to the presence of schistosomiasis. Yet excellent medication is available to break the transmission cycle provided that there is a sufficiency of political will, accompanied by effective, inter-sectoral campaign coordination. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00021-7 |
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In the Upper Region along the border with Upper Volta now named Burkina Faso, a total of 185 clay-core dams were constructed in 15 years to enhance village water supplies during the 6-month dry season. In a concentrated area of N.E. Ghana (now the Upper East Region) no fewer than 104 dams were erected in only 3 years. The beneficial impacts of the dams are indisputable, and life today would be unthinkable without them, despite severe problems of neglect of maintenance. Equally undeniable has been a negative disease impact whereby the regional rate of schistosomiasis tripled in 1 or 2 years from 17% to 51% prevalence. Thus, an agriculturally induced hyperendemicity of “red water” or “bloody urine” disease was established. To test the longevity of community disease impact, a survey of hematuria (bloody urine) was conducted in the same areas in 1997. It showed a 40-year ecological entrenchment of elevated levels of schistosomiasis, that is, seemingly permanent alteration of regional disease ecology. The consequences of planning negligence have left a generational impact in that hematuria has become a “rite of passage” for young boys and girls. Unprepared and overburdened rural health care systems are ill-equipped in the face of competing demands to respond to the presence of schistosomiasis. 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In the Upper Region along the border with Upper Volta now named Burkina Faso, a total of 185 clay-core dams were constructed in 15 years to enhance village water supplies during the 6-month dry season. In a concentrated area of N.E. Ghana (now the Upper East Region) no fewer than 104 dams were erected in only 3 years. The beneficial impacts of the dams are indisputable, and life today would be unthinkable without them, despite severe problems of neglect of maintenance. Equally undeniable has been a negative disease impact whereby the regional rate of schistosomiasis tripled in 1 or 2 years from 17% to 51% prevalence. Thus, an agriculturally induced hyperendemicity of “red water” or “bloody urine” disease was established. To test the longevity of community disease impact, a survey of hematuria (bloody urine) was conducted in the same areas in 1997. It showed a 40-year ecological entrenchment of elevated levels of schistosomiasis, that is, seemingly permanent alteration of regional disease ecology. The consequences of planning negligence have left a generational impact in that hematuria has become a “rite of passage” for young boys and girls. Unprepared and overburdened rural health care systems are ill-equipped in the face of competing demands to respond to the presence of schistosomiasis. Yet excellent medication is available to break the transmission cycle provided that there is a sufficiency of political will, accompanied by effective, inter-sectoral campaign coordination.</description><subject>Adolescent</subject><subject>Agricultural Development</subject><subject>Agricultural development projects</subject><subject>Agricultural development projects Schistosomiasis hematobium Water-borne diseases Ghana</subject><subject>Agriculture</subject><subject>Animals</subject><subject>Biological and medical sciences</subject><subject>Built Environment</subject><subject>Child</subject><subject>Cost of Illness</subject><subject>Dams</subject><subject>Development Programs</subject><subject>Development projects</subject><subject>Diseases</subject><subject>Diseases caused by trematodes</subject><subject>Ecology</subject><subject>Endemic Diseases</subject><subject>Ghana</subject><subject>Ghana - epidemiology</subject><subject>Health</subject><subject>Helminthic diseases</subject><subject>Hematuria - epidemiology</subject><subject>Hematuria - etiology</subject><subject>Hematuria - parasitology</subject><subject>Humans</subject><subject>Infectious diseases</subject><subject>Medical sciences</subject><subject>Medicine</subject><subject>Parasitic diseases</subject><subject>Predictors</subject><subject>Prevalence</subject><subject>Public health</subject><subject>Schistosoma haematobium - pathogenicity</subject><subject>Schistosomiases</subject><subject>Schistosomiasis</subject><subject>Schistosomiasis haematobia - epidemiology</subject><subject>Schistosomiasis haematobia - parasitology</subject><subject>Schistosomiasis hematobium</subject><subject>Social sciences</subject><subject>Tropical medicine</subject><subject>Water - parasitology</subject><subject>Water Supply</subject><subject>Water-borne diseases</subject><issn>0277-9536</issn><issn>1873-5347</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2003</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>EIF</sourceid><sourceid>X2L</sourceid><sourceid>7QJ</sourceid><sourceid>BHHNA</sourceid><recordid>eNqFks1u1DAUhSMEoqXwCCBvQK1EwD9x7LBBqCqlqBISpWvLsa87Rkmc2kml2fEO7Hk4ngRnZjQsZ2FfS_7O9bF9iuIlwe8IJvX7G0yFKBvO6lNMzzDGlJTiUXFMpGAlZ5V4XBzvkaPiWUo_M0SwZE-LI0IrwRhujos_V8MKop_AonaOFgYUHLI-gU7wAem76M3cTXPUHbK6T0gPFk0rQCPE5NMEg4FF0XYh2DWaox8And6YVd4LKfReZwqtoNdTaP3cnyE_bPS3Y-6ALnSa0He482Fz7uVKD_otIg1v_v76TZpGPC-eON0leLGrJ8Xt54sf51_K62-XV-efrkvDOZnKtibculZWde3qFrtKc8EJSGoMVK1xIGTtLHUgCQPOG0wlcU5KaSi3jZTspHiz7TvGcD9DmlTvk4Gu0wOEOSlBpcyP1hwEsxHCmTwMZoOCEsEPgkxWBFdi8ci3oIkhpQhOjdH3Oq4VwWrJhNpkQi0frjBVm0wokXVft7oII5i9CABSMD1Y9aCY5nWe1nlQjFkuflnmMS6VNIqySq2mPjd7tXM7t4t2b2GXqAy83gE6Gd25qAfj03-uqiijnGbu45aD_K0PHqJKxi9xsj6CmZQN_sC9_gF8ve0D</recordid><startdate>2003</startdate><enddate>2003</enddate><creator>Hunter, John M</creator><general>Elsevier Ltd</general><general>Elsevier</general><scope>IQODW</scope><scope>CGR</scope><scope>CUY</scope><scope>CVF</scope><scope>ECM</scope><scope>EIF</scope><scope>NPM</scope><scope>DKI</scope><scope>X2L</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>8BJ</scope><scope>FQK</scope><scope>JBE</scope><scope>7QJ</scope><scope>7U3</scope><scope>BHHNA</scope><scope>7X8</scope></search><sort><creationdate>2003</creationdate><title>Inherited burden of disease: agricultural dams and the persistence of bloody urine (Schistosomiasis hematobium) in the Upper East Region of Ghana, 1959–1997</title><author>Hunter, John M</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c551t-b615dfb8466f6b0f4a5751e82cce4bcfe786fd2fe813e5590281ff888c25d9883</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2003</creationdate><topic>Adolescent</topic><topic>Agricultural Development</topic><topic>Agricultural development projects</topic><topic>Agricultural development projects Schistosomiasis hematobium Water-borne diseases Ghana</topic><topic>Agriculture</topic><topic>Animals</topic><topic>Biological and medical sciences</topic><topic>Built Environment</topic><topic>Child</topic><topic>Cost of Illness</topic><topic>Dams</topic><topic>Development Programs</topic><topic>Development projects</topic><topic>Diseases</topic><topic>Diseases caused by trematodes</topic><topic>Ecology</topic><topic>Endemic Diseases</topic><topic>Ghana</topic><topic>Ghana - 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Academic</collection><jtitle>Social science & medicine (1982)</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Hunter, John M</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Inherited burden of disease: agricultural dams and the persistence of bloody urine (Schistosomiasis hematobium) in the Upper East Region of Ghana, 1959–1997</atitle><jtitle>Social science & medicine (1982)</jtitle><addtitle>Soc Sci Med</addtitle><date>2003</date><risdate>2003</risdate><volume>56</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>219</spage><epage>234</epage><pages>219-234</pages><issn>0277-9536</issn><eissn>1873-5347</eissn><coden>SSMDEP</coden><abstract>A major agricultural development project was commissioned to celebrate Ghana's independence in 1957. In the Upper Region along the border with Upper Volta now named Burkina Faso, a total of 185 clay-core dams were constructed in 15 years to enhance village water supplies during the 6-month dry season. In a concentrated area of N.E. Ghana (now the Upper East Region) no fewer than 104 dams were erected in only 3 years. The beneficial impacts of the dams are indisputable, and life today would be unthinkable without them, despite severe problems of neglect of maintenance. Equally undeniable has been a negative disease impact whereby the regional rate of schistosomiasis tripled in 1 or 2 years from 17% to 51% prevalence. Thus, an agriculturally induced hyperendemicity of “red water” or “bloody urine” disease was established. To test the longevity of community disease impact, a survey of hematuria (bloody urine) was conducted in the same areas in 1997. It showed a 40-year ecological entrenchment of elevated levels of schistosomiasis, that is, seemingly permanent alteration of regional disease ecology. The consequences of planning negligence have left a generational impact in that hematuria has become a “rite of passage” for young boys and girls. Unprepared and overburdened rural health care systems are ill-equipped in the face of competing demands to respond to the presence of schistosomiasis. Yet excellent medication is available to break the transmission cycle provided that there is a sufficiency of political will, accompanied by effective, inter-sectoral campaign coordination.</abstract><cop>Oxford</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><pmid>12473309</pmid><doi>10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00021-7</doi><tpages>16</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Adolescent Agricultural Development Agricultural development projects Agricultural development projects Schistosomiasis hematobium Water-borne diseases Ghana Agriculture Animals Biological and medical sciences Built Environment Child Cost of Illness Dams Development Programs Development projects Diseases Diseases caused by trematodes Ecology Endemic Diseases Ghana Ghana - epidemiology Health Helminthic diseases Hematuria - epidemiology Hematuria - etiology Hematuria - parasitology Humans Infectious diseases Medical sciences Medicine Parasitic diseases Predictors Prevalence Public health Schistosoma haematobium - pathogenicity Schistosomiases Schistosomiasis Schistosomiasis haematobia - epidemiology Schistosomiasis haematobia - parasitology Schistosomiasis hematobium Social sciences Tropical medicine Water - parasitology Water Supply Water-borne diseases |
title | Inherited burden of disease: agricultural dams and the persistence of bloody urine (Schistosomiasis hematobium) in the Upper East Region of Ghana, 1959–1997 |
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