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Prevalence and spatial distributions of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1–9 years in rural areas of Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela districts, Northwestern Ethiopia
by
Alelign, Misganaw
, Abinew, Yideg
, Shifaw, Eshetu
, Adane, Metadel
, Taddege, Tesfahun
, Malede, Asmamaw
in
Analysis
/ Analytical techniques
/ Antibiotics
/ Autocorrelation
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Biostatistics
/ Blindness
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Clustering
/ Confidence intervals
/ Conjunctiva
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Demographic aspects
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease hot spots
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Follicles
/ Global Moran’s I
/ Gonji Kolela
/ Hotspot analysis
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Hunger
/ Infant
/ Inflammation
/ Intervention
/ Living conditions
/ Local getis-ord-statistic
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Population
/ Poverty
/ Prevalence
/ Prevalence studies (Epidemiology)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Research hot spots
/ Response rates
/ Risk factors
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sample size
/ Sanitation
/ Sociodemographics
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Spatial distribution
/ Statistical analysis
/ Trachoma
/ Trachoma - epidemiology
/ Trachomatous inflammation-follicular
/ Vaccine
/ Villages
2025
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Prevalence and spatial distributions of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1–9 years in rural areas of Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela districts, Northwestern Ethiopia
by
Alelign, Misganaw
, Abinew, Yideg
, Shifaw, Eshetu
, Adane, Metadel
, Taddege, Tesfahun
, Malede, Asmamaw
in
Analysis
/ Analytical techniques
/ Antibiotics
/ Autocorrelation
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Biostatistics
/ Blindness
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Clustering
/ Confidence intervals
/ Conjunctiva
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Demographic aspects
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease hot spots
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Follicles
/ Global Moran’s I
/ Gonji Kolela
/ Hotspot analysis
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Hunger
/ Infant
/ Inflammation
/ Intervention
/ Living conditions
/ Local getis-ord-statistic
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Population
/ Poverty
/ Prevalence
/ Prevalence studies (Epidemiology)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Research hot spots
/ Response rates
/ Risk factors
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sample size
/ Sanitation
/ Sociodemographics
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Spatial distribution
/ Statistical analysis
/ Trachoma
/ Trachoma - epidemiology
/ Trachomatous inflammation-follicular
/ Vaccine
/ Villages
2025
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Prevalence and spatial distributions of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1–9 years in rural areas of Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela districts, Northwestern Ethiopia
by
Alelign, Misganaw
, Abinew, Yideg
, Shifaw, Eshetu
, Adane, Metadel
, Taddege, Tesfahun
, Malede, Asmamaw
in
Analysis
/ Analytical techniques
/ Antibiotics
/ Autocorrelation
/ Biodiversity hot spots
/ Biostatistics
/ Blindness
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Child
/ Child, Preschool
/ Children
/ Clustering
/ Confidence intervals
/ Conjunctiva
/ Cross-sectional studies
/ Demographic aspects
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease hot spots
/ Economic development
/ Economic growth
/ Environmental Health
/ Epidemiology
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Families & family life
/ Female
/ Follicles
/ Global Moran’s I
/ Gonji Kolela
/ Hotspot analysis
/ Households
/ Humans
/ Hunger
/ Infant
/ Inflammation
/ Intervention
/ Living conditions
/ Local getis-ord-statistic
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Population
/ Poverty
/ Prevalence
/ Prevalence studies (Epidemiology)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Research hot spots
/ Response rates
/ Risk factors
/ Rural areas
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sample size
/ Sanitation
/ Sociodemographics
/ Spatial Analysis
/ Spatial distribution
/ Statistical analysis
/ Trachoma
/ Trachoma - epidemiology
/ Trachomatous inflammation-follicular
/ Vaccine
/ Villages
2025
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Prevalence and spatial distributions of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1–9 years in rural areas of Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela districts, Northwestern Ethiopia
Journal Article
Prevalence and spatial distributions of trachomatous inflammation-follicular among children aged 1–9 years in rural areas of Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela districts, Northwestern Ethiopia
2025
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Overview
Background
Trachoma is the world’s major infectious cause of blindness, responsible for blinding 1.9 million people, including 1.2 million irreversibly. It is still endemic predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa, including Ethiopia. Five or more follicles in the upper tarsal conjunctiva measuring at least 0.5 mm indicate trachomatous inflammation-follicular (TF) disease. No previous study determined the prevalence of TF, and it had not been determined for the study area to satisfy adequate geospatial representation/spatial distribution of TF among children 1–9 years old. These study findings can help programmers understand the prevalence of TF and identify the villages in the study area where TF will be clustered to implement appropriate intervention strategies to support the current trachoma control and elimination program and to help achieve SDG Goal 3 target 3.3 and Goal 6. Therefore, this study addressed those gaps by identifying TF’s prevalence and spatial distribution using spatial analytical techniques and models in Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela Districts.
Methods
The study utilizes spatial autocorrelation methodologies, including Global Moran’s I and Local Getis-Ord statistics, to describe and map spatial clusters. The global Moran’s I statistic was used to evaluate the global spatial autocorrelation of TF prevalence. The Gi_Bin field was computed in hot spot spatial analysis, independent of the False Discovery Rate correction (FDR), to detect important hot spots and cold spots. Bins of +/-3, +/-2, and +/-1 indicated statistically significant clustering of the TF distribution with 99%, 95%, and 90% confidence levels, respectively. However, non-significant TF clusters were identified with a 0 bin.
Results
This study found that the prevalence of TF was 17.8% (95% CI: 15.3–20.2%). From spatial analytical techniques and models, the global spatial autocorrelation analysis based on feature locations and attribute values revealed a clustering of TF among children aged 1–9 years across the study area (Global Moran’s I = 0.849, p-value < 0.0001). In hot spot spatial analysis, fourteen hot spot clusters were detected. Eight clusters were detected as significantly clustered from those fourteen hot spot areas at the 99% confidence level. The study also found that the distribution of TF was not spatially random. It was clustered at the village levels and showed strong spatial patterns. It was affected by different locations based on sociodemographic, environmental, and behavioral factors. It was more clustered in Gonji Kolela District compared to Yilmana Densa District. This study showed that trachoma is a family-based disease.
Conclusion
TF was found to be higher than the WHO recommended threshold of 10% to say that trachoma is a severe public health problem to conduct MDA and eliminate trachoma as a Public Health problem in a community when the prevalence of TF is less than 5%. The results of the study may be used to support the current trachoma control and elimination program, and to help achieve SDG Goal 3 target 3.3 and Goal 6. Intervention against TF may also have an impact on poverty (SDG1) and hunger (SDG2), may improve education (SDG4), work, and economic growth (SDG8). These will be helpful to decide whether the Yilmana Densa and Gonji Kolela Districts meet VISION 2020, “The Right to Sight” (elimination of the major causes of avoidable blindness), an initiative launched in Ethiopia in September 2002. It is recommended that coordinated work on implementing the WHO endorsed SAFE strategy in particular, and enhancing the overall living conditions of the community be given a high priority.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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