posts: 26475
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26475 | Yaws | untitled-reusable-block-83 | wp_block | publish | <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Yaws, which is also called framboesia, is caused by the bacterium <em>Treponema pallidum</em> subsp. <em>pertenue</em> and classified as a Neglected Tropical Disease by the WHO. The bacterium infects humans and non-human primates. The name framboesia is derived from lesions that resemble raspberries (French: framboise).{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false" target="_blank">google books</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Within 90 days of being infected, patients develop symptoms in the form of <a rel="noopener noreferrer" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaws" target="_blank">lesions</a> which completely disappear again within six months. The second round of lesions erupts months to years later, also healing off again within six months but likely leaving behind scars. In approximately 10% of untreated cases, the third round of lesions can occur and result in complications such as skin, bones, and cartilage destruction. The Oxford Textbook of Medicine describes yaws as "rarely fatal".{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false" target="_blank">google books</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Yaws is spread by skin-to-skin contact and rarely via objects, by bacteria entering through broken skin. An infection can spread from patients currently suffering from lesions, from people who carry the bacteria but at that moment do not have lesions, as well as from non-human primates.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Yaws was almost eradicated in the early 1960s already but re-emerged due to discontinued support from the WHO and lack of attention by governments' healthcare systems. It is back on the WHO's list of diseases to be eradicated by 2020. This is believed feasible because effective antibiotics exist against yaws. The required mass treatments are relatively easy and cheap to administer. However, many countries do not monitor and report yaws cases to the WHO so the global number of cases and thereby progress towards eradication remains largely unknown.{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false" target="_blank">google books</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:heading {"level":4} --> <h4>Means against the disease</h4> <!-- /wp:heading --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The spread of the <em>Treponema pallidum</em> bacterium can be fought in two ways; improved hygiene and health education as well as antibiotic treatment. While improved hygiene and health education reduce the bacterium's transmission, antibiotic treatment heals infected people and thereby reduces the number of carriers of the disease.{ref}World Health Organisation. <em>Yaws: A forgotten disease. Neglected tropical diseases</em>. Retrieved 7 July 2018, from <a href="http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/,</a> and Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false" target="_blank">google books</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Usually, yaw patients were treated with a single dose of penicillin but in 2012 it was discovered that a single, swallowed dose of another antibiotic called azithromycin could completely cure yaw.{ref}Mitja, O., Hays, R., Rinaldi, A., McDermot, R., & Bassat, Q. (2012). New Treatment Schemes for Yaws: The Path Toward Eradication. <em>Clinical Infectious Diseases, 55(3),</em> 406-412. Freely available online <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/55/3/406/614342" target="_blank">here</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Yaws were usually diagnosed by the emergence of symptoms, i.e. the first round of lesions. Blood tests could confirm the presence of the Treponema pallidum bacterium but could not differentiate between active and past infections. Recently, new diagnostic tests have been developed that can diagnose a yaw infection faster and more accurately.{ref}Kositz C., Butcher R., & Marks M. (2017). New Diagnostics for Yaws. <em>The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene</em>, 96(1), 3-4. Fully available online <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5239706/" target="_blank">here</a>.{/ref} This is important as the correct antibiotics could be immediately prescribed to confirmed yaws patients and avoid unnecessary oversubscription of antibiotics to patients suffering from similar symptoms caused by different pathogens.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:heading {"level":4} --> <h4>The road towards yaws eradication</h4> <!-- /wp:heading --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The history of yaw eradication efforts illustrates the importance of political support. Yaws ticks all the required features for disease eradication: it is caused by only one species of bacteria, only infects humans and non-human primates, good and cheap means against and diagnostics for yaws exist and both some countries have successfully interrupted its transmission. The reason yaw has not been eradicated yet is "simply" that for a long time, yaw has been neglected; no eradication campaigns were run and no records of case numbers were kept. Even today, only eight countries report yaws cases to the WHO.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The disease-causing pathogen of yaws was identified in 1905 but it was not until the establishment of the World Health Organisation in the aftermath of World War II that antibiotics were tested as a treatment option.{ref}Mitjà, O., Asiedu, K., & Mabey, D. (2013). Yaws. <em>The Lancet</em>, 381(9868), 763-773. Available by subscription <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673612621308" target="_blank">here</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p> Anecdotal evidence suggests that the disease burden prior to the WHO efforts was extremely high: In what today constitutes Ghana in 1936, 62.7% of all infectious diseases treated in government health facilities were yaws cases (for comparison, malaria only accounted for 20.3%).{ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>"Similarly, in Nigeria in 1935, among infectious diseases treated at government health facilities, yaws constituted 47.76% compared with 15.61% for malaria."<br> Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. <em>Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases</em>, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/" target="_blank">here</a>.{/ref} </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>It has been estimated that in 1955, there were 50 million yaw cases worldwide.{ref}Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. <em>Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases</em>, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/" target="_blank">here</a>.{/ref} Therefore, after a few pilot projects that tested the efficacy of the antibiotic penicillin, the WHO together with UNICEF launched mass treatment campaigns in 46 countries in 1952. By 1964, after screening approximately 300 million people and administering approximately 50 million penicillin doses to patients and their close contacts, yaw cases were said to be reduced by 95% to just 2.5 million cases. In light of such a successful reduction in yaws' disease burden, internationally coordinated mass campaigns were discontinued and countries' primary health care systems were tasked with the elimination of the last 5% of cases. Global interest faded, developing countries' healthcare systems already had too much on their plate and since no records were kept anymore, nobody knew how yaws numbers were developing.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>It was only with a WHO review of its Neglected Tropical Diseases in 2012 that yaws regained international attention. The WHO even declared it its goal of eradicating yaws by 2020.<br>These renewed eradication efforts make use of a different antibiotic called azithromycin (described in the previous section) that can be administered orally. A new strategy is to give azithromycin to everyone living in a yaws-prone community, regardless of whether they suffer from yaws or not.{ref}World Health Organisation. (2012). WHO renews the effort to achieve global eradication of yaws by 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2018, from <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/" target="_blank">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>To achieve the eradication of yaws, better monitoring in endemic countries and determining the endemic status of all remaining countries will be necessary. For instance, it is unclear whether the disease is still in circulation in the Americas today.{ref}World Health Organisation. (undated). <em>Yaws: A forgotten disease.</em> Retrieved 12 May 2018, from <a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/" target="_blank">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/</a>.{/ref}</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p> These two charts visualize the only data available - the chart on the left shows a country's status of endemicity in 2021. Fifteen countries are known to be endemic, even though for many more countries (all those shown in yellow) it is unknown whether yaws are still in circulation. Thanks to determined mass treatment and monitoring programs, India successfully eliminated yaws and is certified yaws-free by the WHO. It is colored green on the map.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The chart on the right shows the number of cases for the countries that report yaws infections to the WHO. It is important to note that this chart reflects only the number of reported cases and not the actual number of cases which will be higher as case reporting is limited by surveillance capacity.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --> <!-- wp:columns --> <div class="wp-block-columns"><!-- wp:column --> <div class="wp-block-column"><!-- wp:html --> <iframe style="width: 50%; height: 600px; border: 0px none;" src="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/status-of-yaws-endemicity" width="300" height="150"><span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span></iframe> <!-- /wp:html --></div> <!-- /wp:column --> <!-- wp:column --> <div class="wp-block-column"><!-- wp:html --> <iframe style="width: 50%; height: 600px; border: 0px none;" src="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-reported-yaws-cases" width="300" height="150"><span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span></iframe> <!-- /wp:html --></div> <!-- /wp:column --></div> <!-- /wp:columns --> | { "id": "wp-26475", "slug": "untitled-reusable-block-83", "content": { "toc": [], "body": [ { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Yaws, which is also called framboesia, is caused by the bacterium\u00a0", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Treponema pallidum", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " subsp. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "pertenue", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " and classified as a Neglected Tropical Disease by the WHO. The bacterium infects humans and non-human primates. The name framboesia is derived from lesions that resemble raspberries (French: framboise).{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Oxford Textbook of Medicine", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false", "children": [ { "text": "google books", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Within 90 days of being infected, patients develop symptoms in the form of ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaws", "children": [ { "text": "lesions", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": " which completely disappear again within six months. The second round of lesions erupts months to years later, also healing off again within six months but likely leaving behind scars. In approximately 10% of untreated cases, the third round of lesions can occur and result in complications such as skin, bones, and cartilage destruction. The Oxford Textbook of Medicine describes yaws as \"rarely fatal\".{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Oxford Textbook of Medicine", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 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Firth, ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Oxford Textbook of Medicine", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false", "children": [ { "text": "google books", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "text": [ { "text": "Means against the disease", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "type": "heading", "level": 2, "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "The spread of the ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Treponema pallidum", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " bacterium can be fought in two ways; improved hygiene and health education as well as antibiotic treatment. While improved hygiene and health education reduce the bacterium's transmission, antibiotic treatment heals infected people and thereby reduces the number of carriers of the disease.{ref}World Health Organisation. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Yaws: A forgotten disease. Neglected tropical diseases", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": ". Retrieved 7 July 2018, from ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/", "children": [ { "text": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/,", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": "\u00a0and Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Oxford Textbook of Medicine", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false", "children": [ { "text": "google books", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Usually, yaw patients were treated with a single dose of penicillin but in 2012 it was discovered that a single, swallowed dose of another antibiotic called azithromycin could completely cure yaw.{ref}Mitja, O., Hays, R., Rinaldi, A., McDermot, R., & Bassat, Q. (2012). New Treatment Schemes for Yaws: The Path Toward Eradication. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Clinical Infectious Diseases, 55(3),", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " 406-412. Freely available online ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/55/3/406/614342", "children": [ { "text": "here", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "Yaws were usually diagnosed by the emergence of symptoms, i.e. the first round of lesions. Blood tests could confirm the presence of the\u00a0Treponema\u00a0pallidum\u00a0bacterium but could not differentiate between active and past infections. Recently, new diagnostic tests have been developed that can diagnose a yaw infection faster and more accurately.{ref}Kositz C., Butcher R., & Marks M. (2017). New Diagnostics for Yaws. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": ", 96(1), 3-4. Fully available online ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5239706/", "children": [ { "text": "here", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref} This is important as the correct antibiotics could be immediately prescribed to confirmed yaws patients and avoid unnecessary oversubscription of antibiotics to patients suffering from similar symptoms caused by different pathogens.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "text": [ { "text": "The road towards yaws eradication", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "type": "heading", "level": 2, "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "The history of yaw eradication efforts illustrates the importance of political support. Yaws ticks all the required features for disease eradication: it is caused by only one species of bacteria, only infects humans and non-human primates, good and cheap means against and diagnostics for yaws exist and both some countries have successfully interrupted its transmission. The reason yaw has not been eradicated yet is \"simply\" that for a long time, yaw has been neglected; no eradication campaigns were run and no records of case numbers were kept. Even today, only eight countries report yaws cases to the WHO.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "The disease-causing pathogen of yaws was identified in 1905 but it was not until the establishment of the World Health Organisation in the aftermath of World War II that antibiotics were tested as a treatment option.{ref}Mitj\u00e0, O., Asiedu, K., & Mabey, D. (2013). Yaws. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "The Lancet", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": ", 381(9868), 763-773. Available by subscription ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673612621308", "children": [ { "text": "here", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": " Anecdotal evidence suggests that the disease burden prior to the WHO efforts was extremely high: In what today constitutes Ghana in 1936, 62.7% of all infectious diseases treated in government health facilities were yaws cases (for comparison, malaria only accounted for 20.3%).{ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "\"Similarly, in Nigeria in 1935, among infectious diseases treated at government health facilities, yaws constituted 47.76% compared with 15.61% for malaria.\"", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "spanType": "span-newline" }, { "text": " Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": ", 8(9), e3016. Freely available online ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/", "children": [ { "text": "here", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref} ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "It has been estimated that in 1955, there were 50 million yaw cases worldwide.{ref}Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": ", 8(9), e3016. Freely available online ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/", "children": [ { "text": "here", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref} Therefore, after a few pilot projects that tested the efficacy of the antibiotic penicillin, the WHO together with UNICEF launched mass treatment campaigns in 46 countries in 1952. By 1964, after screening approximately 300 million people and administering approximately 50 million penicillin doses to patients and their close contacts, yaw cases were said to be reduced by 95% to just 2.5 million cases. In light of such a successful reduction in yaws' disease burden, internationally coordinated mass campaigns were discontinued and countries' primary health care systems were tasked with the elimination of the last 5% of cases. Global interest faded, developing countries' healthcare systems already had too much on their plate and since no records were kept anymore, nobody knew how yaws numbers were developing.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "It was only with a WHO review of its Neglected Tropical Diseases in 2012 that yaws regained international attention. The WHO even declared it its goal of eradicating yaws by 2020.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "spanType": "span-newline" }, { "text": "These renewed eradication efforts make use of a different antibiotic called azithromycin (described in the previous section) that can be administered orally. A new strategy is to give azithromycin to everyone living in a yaws-prone community, regardless of whether they suffer from yaws or not.{ref}World Health Organisation. (2012). WHO renews the effort to achieve global eradication of yaws by 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2018, from\u00a0", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/", "children": [ { "text": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "To achieve the eradication of yaws, better monitoring in endemic countries and determining the endemic status of all remaining countries will be necessary. For instance, it is unclear whether the disease is still in circulation in the Americas today.{ref}World Health Organisation. (undated). ", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "children": [ { "text": "Yaws: A forgotten disease.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-italic" }, { "text": " Retrieved 12 May 2018, from\u00a0", "spanType": "span-simple-text" }, { "url": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/", "children": [ { "text": "http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "spanType": "span-link" }, { "text": ".{/ref}", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": " These two charts visualize the only data available - the chart on the left shows a country's status of endemicity in 2021. Fifteen countries are known to be endemic, even though for many more countries (all those shown in yellow) it is unknown whether yaws are still in circulation. Thanks to determined mass treatment and monitoring programs, India successfully eliminated yaws and is certified yaws-free by the WHO. It is colored green on the map.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "type": "text", "value": [ { "text": "The chart on the right shows the number of cases for the countries that report yaws infections to the WHO. It is important to note that this chart reflects only the number of reported cases and not the actual number of cases which will be higher as case reporting is limited by surveillance capacity.", "spanType": "span-simple-text" } ], "parseErrors": [] }, { "left": [ { "url": "https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/status-of-yaws-endemicity", "type": "chart", "parseErrors": [] } ], "type": "sticky-right", "right": [ { "url": "https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-reported-yaws-cases", "type": "chart", "parseErrors": [] } ], "parseErrors": [] } ], "type": "article", "title": "Yaws", "authors": [ null ], "dateline": "October 30, 2019", "sidebar-toc": false, "featured-image": "" }, "createdAt": "2019-10-30T16:03:56.000Z", "published": false, "updatedAt": "2022-09-15T16:50:16.000Z", "revisionId": null, "publishedAt": "2019-10-30T16:03:51.000Z", "relatedCharts": [], "publicationContext": "listed" } |
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2019-10-30 16:03:51 | 2024-02-16 14:22:57 | [ null ] |
2019-10-30 16:03:56 | 2022-09-15 16:50:16 | {} |
Yaws, which is also called framboesia, is caused by the bacterium _Treponema pallidum_ subsp. _pertenue_ and classified as a Neglected Tropical Disease by the WHO. The bacterium infects humans and non-human primates. The name framboesia is derived from lesions that resemble raspberries (French: framboise).{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, _Oxford Textbook of Medicine_ (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on [google books](https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false).{/ref} Within 90 days of being infected, patients develop symptoms in the form of [lesions](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaws) which completely disappear again within six months. The second round of lesions erupts months to years later, also healing off again within six months but likely leaving behind scars. In approximately 10% of untreated cases, the third round of lesions can occur and result in complications such as skin, bones, and cartilage destruction. The Oxford Textbook of Medicine describes yaws as "rarely fatal".{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, _Oxford Textbook of Medicine_ (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on [google books](https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false).{/ref} Yaws is spread by skin-to-skin contact and rarely via objects, by bacteria entering through broken skin. An infection can spread from patients currently suffering from lesions, from people who carry the bacteria but at that moment do not have lesions, as well as from non-human primates. Yaws was almost eradicated in the early 1960s already but re-emerged due to discontinued support from the WHO and lack of attention by governments' healthcare systems. It is back on the WHO's list of diseases to be eradicated by 2020. This is believed feasible because effective antibiotics exist against yaws. The required mass treatments are relatively easy and cheap to administer. However, many countries do not monitor and report yaws cases to the WHO so the global number of cases and thereby progress towards eradication remains largely unknown.{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, _Oxford Textbook of Medicine_ (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on [google books](https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false).{/ref} ## Means against the disease The spread of the _Treponema pallidum_ bacterium can be fought in two ways; improved hygiene and health education as well as antibiotic treatment. While improved hygiene and health education reduce the bacterium's transmission, antibiotic treatment heals infected people and thereby reduces the number of carriers of the disease.{ref}World Health Organisation. _Yaws: A forgotten disease. Neglected tropical diseases_. Retrieved 7 July 2018, from [http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/,](http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/) and Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, _Oxford Textbook of Medicine_ (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on [google books](https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false).{/ref} Usually, yaw patients were treated with a single dose of penicillin but in 2012 it was discovered that a single, swallowed dose of another antibiotic called azithromycin could completely cure yaw.{ref}Mitja, O., Hays, R., Rinaldi, A., McDermot, R., & Bassat, Q. (2012). New Treatment Schemes for Yaws: The Path Toward Eradication. _Clinical Infectious Diseases, 55(3),_ 406-412. Freely available online [here](https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/55/3/406/614342).{/ref} Yaws were usually diagnosed by the emergence of symptoms, i.e. the first round of lesions. Blood tests could confirm the presence of the Treponema pallidum bacterium but could not differentiate between active and past infections. Recently, new diagnostic tests have been developed that can diagnose a yaw infection faster and more accurately.{ref}Kositz C., Butcher R., & Marks M. (2017). New Diagnostics for Yaws. _The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene_, 96(1), 3-4. Fully available online [here](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5239706/).{/ref} This is important as the correct antibiotics could be immediately prescribed to confirmed yaws patients and avoid unnecessary oversubscription of antibiotics to patients suffering from similar symptoms caused by different pathogens. ## The road towards yaws eradication The history of yaw eradication efforts illustrates the importance of political support. Yaws ticks all the required features for disease eradication: it is caused by only one species of bacteria, only infects humans and non-human primates, good and cheap means against and diagnostics for yaws exist and both some countries have successfully interrupted its transmission. The reason yaw has not been eradicated yet is "simply" that for a long time, yaw has been neglected; no eradication campaigns were run and no records of case numbers were kept. Even today, only eight countries report yaws cases to the WHO. The disease-causing pathogen of yaws was identified in 1905 but it was not until the establishment of the World Health Organisation in the aftermath of World War II that antibiotics were tested as a treatment option.{ref}Mitjà, O., Asiedu, K., & Mabey, D. (2013). Yaws. _The Lancet_, 381(9868), 763-773. Available by subscription [here](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673612621308).{/ref} Anecdotal evidence suggests that the disease burden prior to the WHO efforts was extremely high: In what today constitutes Ghana in 1936, 62.7% of all infectious diseases treated in government health facilities were yaws cases (for comparison, malaria only accounted for 20.3%).{ref} "Similarly, in Nigeria in 1935, among infectious diseases treated at government health facilities, yaws constituted 47.76% compared with 15.61% for malaria." Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. _Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases_, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online [here](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/).{/ref} It has been estimated that in 1955, there were 50 million yaw cases worldwide.{ref}Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO's 2020 Target. _Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases_, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online [here](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/).{/ref} Therefore, after a few pilot projects that tested the efficacy of the antibiotic penicillin, the WHO together with UNICEF launched mass treatment campaigns in 46 countries in 1952. By 1964, after screening approximately 300 million people and administering approximately 50 million penicillin doses to patients and their close contacts, yaw cases were said to be reduced by 95% to just 2.5 million cases. In light of such a successful reduction in yaws' disease burden, internationally coordinated mass campaigns were discontinued and countries' primary health care systems were tasked with the elimination of the last 5% of cases. Global interest faded, developing countries' healthcare systems already had too much on their plate and since no records were kept anymore, nobody knew how yaws numbers were developing. It was only with a WHO review of its Neglected Tropical Diseases in 2012 that yaws regained international attention. The WHO even declared it its goal of eradicating yaws by 2020. These renewed eradication efforts make use of a different antibiotic called azithromycin (described in the previous section) that can be administered orally. A new strategy is to give azithromycin to everyone living in a yaws-prone community, regardless of whether they suffer from yaws or not.{ref}World Health Organisation. (2012). WHO renews the effort to achieve global eradication of yaws by 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2018, from [http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/](http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/).{/ref} To achieve the eradication of yaws, better monitoring in endemic countries and determining the endemic status of all remaining countries will be necessary. For instance, it is unclear whether the disease is still in circulation in the Americas today.{ref}World Health Organisation. (undated). _Yaws: A forgotten disease._ Retrieved 12 May 2018, from [http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/](http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/).{/ref} These two charts visualize the only data available - the chart on the left shows a country's status of endemicity in 2021. Fifteen countries are known to be endemic, even though for many more countries (all those shown in yellow) it is unknown whether yaws are still in circulation. Thanks to determined mass treatment and monitoring programs, India successfully eliminated yaws and is certified yaws-free by the WHO. It is colored green on the map. The chart on the right shows the number of cases for the countries that report yaws infections to the WHO. It is important to note that this chart reflects only the number of reported cases and not the actual number of cases which will be higher as case reporting is limited by surveillance capacity. <Chart url="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/status-of-yaws-endemicity"/> <Chart url="https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-reported-yaws-cases"/> | { "data": { "wpBlock": { "content": "\n<p>Yaws, which is also called framboesia, is caused by the bacterium <em>Treponema pallidum</em> subsp. <em>pertenue</em> and classified as a Neglected Tropical Disease by the WHO. The bacterium infects humans and non-human primates. The name framboesia is derived from lesions that resemble raspberries (French: framboise).{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false\" target=\"_blank\">google books</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>Within 90 days of being infected, patients develop symptoms in the form of <a rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaws\" target=\"_blank\">lesions</a> which completely disappear again within six months. The second round of lesions erupts months to years later, also healing off again within six months but likely leaving behind scars. In approximately 10% of untreated cases, the third round of lesions can occur and result in complications such as skin, bones, and cartilage destruction. The Oxford Textbook of Medicine describes yaws as “rarely fatal”.{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false\" target=\"_blank\">google books</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yaws is spread by skin-to-skin contact and rarely via objects, by bacteria entering through broken skin. An infection can spread from patients currently suffering from lesions, from people who carry the bacteria but at that moment do not have lesions, as well as from non-human primates.</p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yaws was almost eradicated in the early 1960s already but re-emerged due to discontinued support from the WHO and lack of attention by governments’ healthcare systems. It is back on the WHO’s list of diseases to be eradicated by 2020. This is believed feasible because effective antibiotics exist against yaws. The required mass treatments are relatively easy and cheap to administer. However, many countries do not monitor and report yaws cases to the WHO so the global number of cases and thereby progress towards eradication remains largely unknown.{ref}Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false\" target=\"_blank\">google books</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<h4>Means against the disease</h4>\n\n\n\n<p>The spread of the <em>Treponema pallidum</em> bacterium can be fought in two ways; improved hygiene and health education as well as antibiotic treatment. While improved hygiene and health education reduce the bacterium’s transmission, antibiotic treatment heals infected people and thereby reduces the number of carriers of the disease.{ref}World Health Organisation. <em>Yaws: A forgotten disease. Neglected tropical diseases</em>. Retrieved 7 July 2018, from <a href=\"http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/\">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/,</a> and Warrell, D. (2012). Nonvenereal endemic treponematoses: yaws, endemic syphilis (betel), and pinta. In D. Warrell, T. Cox & J. Firth, <em>Oxford Textbook of Medicine</em> (4th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Partially available online on <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=_s65U1n9Lf8C&oi=fnd&pg=PP2&dq=Oxford+textbook+of+medicine&ots=xj5sTJJJms&sig=cQ69OGQ2lQ30gYu-dRzUTm27KeM#v=onepage&q=Oxford%20textbook%20of%20medicine&f=false\" target=\"_blank\">google books</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>Usually, yaw patients were treated with a single dose of penicillin but in 2012 it was discovered that a single, swallowed dose of another antibiotic called azithromycin could completely cure yaw.{ref}Mitja, O., Hays, R., Rinaldi, A., McDermot, R., & Bassat, Q. (2012). New Treatment Schemes for Yaws: The Path Toward Eradication. <em>Clinical Infectious Diseases, 55(3),</em> 406-412. Freely available online <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/55/3/406/614342\" target=\"_blank\">here</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yaws were usually diagnosed by the emergence of symptoms, i.e. the first round of lesions. Blood tests could confirm the presence of the Treponema pallidum bacterium but could not differentiate between active and past infections. Recently, new diagnostic tests have been developed that can diagnose a yaw infection faster and more accurately.{ref}Kositz C., Butcher R., & Marks M. (2017). New Diagnostics for Yaws. <em>The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene</em>, 96(1), 3-4. Fully available online <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5239706/\" target=\"_blank\">here</a>.{/ref} This is important as the correct antibiotics could be immediately prescribed to confirmed yaws patients and avoid unnecessary oversubscription of antibiotics to patients suffering from similar symptoms caused by different pathogens.</p>\n\n\n\n<h4>The road towards yaws eradication</h4>\n\n\n\n<p>The history of yaw eradication efforts illustrates the importance of political support. Yaws ticks all the required features for disease eradication: it is caused by only one species of bacteria, only infects humans and non-human primates, good and cheap means against and diagnostics for yaws exist and both some countries have successfully interrupted its transmission. The reason yaw has not been eradicated yet is “simply” that for a long time, yaw has been neglected; no eradication campaigns were run and no records of case numbers were kept. Even today, only eight countries report yaws cases to the WHO.</p>\n\n\n\n<p>The disease-causing pathogen of yaws was identified in 1905 but it was not until the establishment of the World Health Organisation in the aftermath of World War II that antibiotics were tested as a treatment option.{ref}Mitj\u00e0, O., Asiedu, K., & Mabey, D. (2013). Yaws. <em>The Lancet</em>, 381(9868), 763-773. Available by subscription <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673612621308\" target=\"_blank\">here</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p> Anecdotal evidence suggests that the disease burden prior to the WHO efforts was extremely high: In what today constitutes Ghana in 1936, 62.7% of all infectious diseases treated in government health facilities were yaws cases (for comparison, malaria only accounted for 20.3%).{ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>“Similarly, in Nigeria in 1935, among infectious diseases treated at government health facilities, yaws constituted 47.76% compared with 15.61% for malaria.”<br> Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO’s 2020 Target. <em>Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases</em>, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/\" target=\"_blank\">here</a>.{/ref} </p>\n\n\n\n<p>It has been estimated that in 1955, there were 50 million yaw cases worldwide.{ref}Asiedu, K., Fitzpatrick, C., & Jannin, J. (2014). Eradication of Yaws: Historical Efforts and Achieving WHO’s 2020 Target. <em>Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases</em>, 8(9), e3016. Freely available online <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177727/\" target=\"_blank\">here</a>.{/ref} Therefore, after a few pilot projects that tested the efficacy of the antibiotic penicillin, the WHO together with UNICEF launched mass treatment campaigns in 46 countries in 1952. By 1964, after screening approximately 300 million people and administering approximately 50 million penicillin doses to patients and their close contacts, yaw cases were said to be reduced by 95% to just 2.5 million cases. In light of such a successful reduction in yaws’ disease burden, internationally coordinated mass campaigns were discontinued and countries’ primary health care systems were tasked with the elimination of the last 5% of cases. Global interest faded, developing countries’ healthcare systems already had too much on their plate and since no records were kept anymore, nobody knew how yaws numbers were developing.</p>\n\n\n\n<p>It was only with a WHO review of its Neglected Tropical Diseases in 2012 that yaws regained international attention. The WHO even declared it its goal of eradicating yaws by 2020.<br>These renewed eradication efforts make use of a different antibiotic called azithromycin (described in the previous section) that can be administered orally. A new strategy is to give azithromycin to everyone living in a yaws-prone community, regardless of whether they suffer from yaws or not.{ref}World Health Organisation. (2012). WHO renews the effort to achieve global eradication of yaws by 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2018, from <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/yaws_azithromycin_2012/en/</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p>To achieve the eradication of yaws, better monitoring in endemic countries and determining the endemic status of all remaining countries will be necessary. For instance, it is unclear whether the disease is still in circulation in the Americas today.{ref}World Health Organisation. (undated). <em>Yaws: A forgotten disease.</em> Retrieved 12 May 2018, from <a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/\" target=\"_blank\">http://www.who.int/neglected_diseases/diseases/yaws/en/</a>.{/ref}</p>\n\n\n\n<p> These two charts visualize the only data available – the chart on the left shows a country’s status of endemicity in 2021. Fifteen countries are known to be endemic, even though for many more countries (all those shown in yellow) it is unknown whether yaws are still in circulation. Thanks to determined mass treatment and monitoring programs, India successfully eliminated yaws and is certified yaws-free by the WHO. It is colored green on the map.</p>\n\n\n\n<p>The chart on the right shows the number of cases for the countries that report yaws infections to the WHO. It is important to note that this chart reflects only the number of reported cases and not the actual number of cases which will be higher as case reporting is limited by surveillance capacity.</p>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-columns\">\n<div class=\"wp-block-column\">\n<iframe loading=\"lazy\" style=\"width: 50%; height: 600px; border: 0px none;\" src=\"https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/status-of-yaws-endemicity\" width=\"300\" height=\"150\"><span data-mce-type=\"bookmark\" style=\"display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;\" class=\"mce_SELRES_start\">\ufeff</span></iframe>\n</div>\n\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-column\">\n<iframe loading=\"lazy\" style=\"width: 50%; height: 600px; border: 0px none;\" src=\"https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-reported-yaws-cases\" width=\"300\" height=\"150\"><span data-mce-type=\"bookmark\" style=\"display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;\" class=\"mce_SELRES_start\">\ufeff</span></iframe>\n</div>\n</div>\n" } }, "extensions": { "debug": [ { "type": "DEBUG_LOGS_INACTIVE", "message": "GraphQL Debug logging is not active. 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