01960nas a2200217 4500000000100000008004100001653001700042653001300059653003200072653001300104653001600117100001100133700001700144700001300161245007100174856007900245300000600324490000600330520139200336022001401728 2013 d10aSurveillance10aResponse10aNeglected Tropical Diseases10aM-health10aElimination1 aZhou X1 aBergquist RN1 aTanner M00aElimination of tropical disease through surveillance and response. uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707090/pdf/2049-9957-2-1.pdf a10 v23 a

Surveillance and response represent the final crucial steps in achieving effective control and particularly elimination of communicable diseases as recognized in the area of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), applied in increasing numbers in endemic countries with ongoing control and elimination programmers. More and more national NTD elimination initiatives are scheduled based on the innovative and effective One world-One health perspective to detect pockets of transmission and disease reintroduction. Resource-constrained countries, which carry the heaviest NTD burdens, face various challenges how to strengthen the health system as well as developing effective and novel tools for surveillance and response tailored to local settings. Surveillance-response approaches take place in two different stages corralling the basic components of the surveillance-response system for NTD elimination. Six different research priorities have been identified:1)dynamic mapping of transmission, 2) near real-time capture of population dynamics, 3) modelling based on a minimum essential database/dataset, 4) implementation of mobile health (m-health) and sensitive diagnostics, 5) design of effective response packages tailored to different transmission settings and levels, and 6) validation of approaches and responses packages.

 

 

 

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