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Background: Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) affect populations in tropical regions, particularly low- and middle-income countries with limited economic and health resources. Mass drug administration (MDA) is a strategy for controlling and eliminating NTDs by treating entire at-risk populations to reduce parasite loads, interrupt transmission, and prevent reinfection. It is cost-effective, and promotes equity by reaching underserved communities. MDA is a critical approach to controlling and eliminating NTDs. Mobile populations in Africa such as nomadic groups and internally displaced persons, may lack access to MDA, which poses challenges to NTD elimination. This study aims to explore the influence of population mobility on the implementation, effectiveness, and sustainability of MDA in Africa.
Materials And Methods: This scoping review adheres to the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews and Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology. PCC (Population, Concept, Context) serves as the foundation for the study. Relevant papers published after 2000 will be identified through a comprehensive search of Medline Ovid, Embase, Web of Science, and gray literature. Studies addressing challenges to MDA in Africa's and related to mobile populations will be included. An Excel spreadsheet modified from the JBI will be used for data extraction and analysis.
Conclusion: The results of this review will shed light on how MDA coverage is affected by the phenomenon of mobile and migrant populations and what effective approaches, if any, have been used to address this problem and improve overall population access to MDA.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12121756 | PMC |
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0324949 | PLOS |
Front Public Health
September 2025
School of Public Health, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, China.
Background: Continuously improving the accessibility of hospitalization expense reimbursement and reducing the medical expense burden on the migrant population are crucial objectives of China's health insurance system reform. Existing research lacks comprehensive analyses of the current status of hospitalization expense reimbursement for the migrant population, and insufficiently addresses the factors influencing reimbursement and equity. The study aims to identify the key factors influencing the hospitalization expense reimbursement for China's migrant population and to further analyze the equity of this reimbursement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrop Med Health
September 2025
World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific, Manila, Philippines.
Background: Tuberculosis preventive treatment (TPT) can avert progression from infection to disease, yet scale-up across the World Health Organization Western Pacific Region is patchy. To guide acceleration, we assessed progress, challenges and responses in seven high-burden countries-Cambodia, China, Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR), Mongolia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines and Viet Nam-drawing on 2015-2023 programme data, structured questionnaires, follow-up interviews and a regional validation workshop.
Main Body: Six of the seven countries have issued national TPT guidelines and five now offer shorter rifapentine- or rifampicin-based regimens.
BMC Med
September 2025
Technical Working Group of Malaria, Ministry of Health, Jakarta, Indonesia.
Background: Indonesia has a complex pattern of malaria transmission alongside a highly decentralized system of governance. Indonesia applies a subnational elimination strategy to achieve nationwide malaria elimination by 2030. This review describes Indonesia's subnational verification process, assesses progress towards subnational elimination over the past several decades, and explores strategies to accelerate achievement of elimination, including the challenges of high transmission in lowland Papua region and zoonotic malaria in Sumatra and Kalimantan islands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Drug Policy
August 2025
Karolinska Institutet, Department of Global Public Health, Solna, Sweden; Department of Infectious Diseases/Venhälsan, Södersjukhuset, Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Clinical Research and Education, Södersjukhuset, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Background: Opioid overdose incidence in Myanmar has not been systematically measured. We quantified individual risk factors of overdose, overdose incidence and mortality, and examined predictors of pre‑overdose engagement with harm reduction services.
Methods: Electronic registers from 21 Asian Harm Reduction Network-Best Shelter (AHRN-BS) sites in Sagaing, Kachin, and northern Shan (2014-2025) were linked.
Eurasian Geogr Econ
November 2023
Department of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Chinese institutional arrangements, particularly the system, hinder long-term settlement of internal migrants by limiting their access to social benefits. This article proposes a new method for assessing migrant settlement: the use of age data to investigate the link between migrant "flow" and "stock". We contend that migrants' inability to settle mainly derives from two sources: the difficulties in maintaining migrant family togetherness, and the impediments to long-term residence of migrants themselves.
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