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The Ecology of Epidemic Sleeping Sickness II.—The Effects of an Epidemic.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

K. R. S. Morris
Affiliation:
Director of Tsetse Control, Gold Coast.

Extract

The most obvious effect of sleeping sickness is depopulation, which can be occasioned directly, through mortality from the disease, and indirectly, through a lowering of the reproductive rate of a community because of induced sterility and increased infant mortality.

The problem was studied in the north of the Gold Coast and the neighbouring French Upper Volta Territory, where severe epidemics have occurred, in localised form since at least the middle of last century, and in widespread form during the past 30 years. The vectors have been the riverine tsetse Glossina palpalis and G.tachinoides.

A close correlation was found to exist between the incidence of sleeping sickness and the population trend with a marked depopulating effect coming in at infection rates above 3 per cent. It was also found that both the rates of trypanosomiasis infection and the extent of depopulation showed closely similar relationships to the proximity of affected villages to the nearest flybelt.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1952

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