Text Only
Search

Success Story Against Guinea Worm

20 September 2008
MP3 - Download (MP3) audio clip
MP3 - Listen to (MP3) audio clip
RealAudio - Download audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Development Report.

Guinea worm disease usually does not kill, but it is extremely painful. It prevents people from caring for their farms, their homes and sometimes even themselves.

Guinea worms can grow up to one meter long
Guinea worms can grow up to one meter long
In nineteen eighty-six, an estimated three and one-half million people in Africa and Asia suffered from Guinea worm disease. There were cases in more than twenty countries.

Today, Guinea worm still exists. But in two thousand seven, fewer than ten thousand cases were reported in five countries.

International organizations made the difference. They worked to increase activism and donations to the Global Dracunculiasis Eradication Campaign. That is the technical name for Guinea worm disease. Local governments provided support for services.

The Carter Center in the United States led the efforts. The World Health Organization and UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, also played central parts. So did the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The C.D.C. says Guinea worm no longer strikes in Asia. Most remaining cases are in Sudan and Ghana. The other countries affected are Mali, Niger and Nigeria. All five are working to stop the disease.

The disease affects poor communities that do not have safe water to drink.

Guinea worms are parasites -- organisms that live in other organisms. The parasites enter the body when a person drinks water containing water fleas infected with Guinea worm larvae, the young form of the worm. "Water fleas" are not insects but copepods, a crustacean like lobsters and crabs but extremely small.

Almost a year passes without signs of the disease. But during that time the worm develops inside the person's body. Some reach lengths of one meter.

Then the worm makes its way toward the skin surface. A blister forms, usually on the legs or feet.

The person suffers greatly when the worm cuts through the skin and leaves the body. And it is not unusual for an infected person to have more than one Guinea worm.

The international campaign has worked to help communities improve their supplies of drinking water. For example, villagers have been taught ways to keep water clean and to take steps like running water through cloth to reduce the risk of infection.

There is no vaccine against Guinea worm and no totally effective treatment. But the disease can be managed to reduce pain and infection.

And that's the VOA Special English Development Report, written by Jerilyn Watson.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Featured Story
Adding Up the Many Dangers of Tobacco -- and Finding New Ones  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Australia Aims for Cleaner Coal  Audio Clip Available
Looking for Energy in Algae  Audio Clip Available
Kennedy Center Honors Six Artists for Life's Work  Audio Clip Available
Henry Loomis, 1919-2008: Director of VOA Had Idea to Create Special English  Audio Clip Available
Similarities, but Also Big Differences, Between Today's Crisis and 1930s  Audio Clip Available
Obama Chooses Economic Team for 'Historic' Crisis  Audio Clip Available
More and More Americans Bike Their Way to Work  Audio Clip Available
US History: As Jackson Aims to Shut Bank, an Economic Crisis Results  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: Thanksgiving in the US  Audio Clip Available
Four More People Who Are Making a Difference  Audio Clip Available
Feeling No Pain: The World of Anesthesia  Audio Clip Available
Neurologist Oliver Sacks Writes About Patients With Unusual Conditions  Audio Clip Available
Vertical Farming: Potatoes? They're on the Fifth Floor  Audio Clip Available