A call for systems epidemiology to tackle the complexity of Schistosomiasis, its control, and its elimination
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Author(s)
Krauth, Stefanie J
Balen, Julie
Gobert, Geoffrey N
Lamberton, Poppy HL
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Ever since the first known written report of schistosomiasis in the mid-19th century, researchers have aimed to increase knowledge of the parasites, their hosts, and the mechanisms contributing to infection and disease. This knowledge generation has been paramount for the development of improved intervention strategies. Yet, despite a broad knowledge base of direct risk factors for schistosomiasis, there remains a paucity of information related to more complex, interconnected, and often hidden drivers of transmission that hamper intervention successes and sustainability. Such complex, multidirectional, non-linear, and synergistic interdependencies are best understood by looking at the integrated system as a whole. A research approach able to address this complexity and find previously neglected causal mechanisms for transmission, which include a wide variety of influencing factors, is needed. Systems epidemiology, as a holistic research approach, can integrate knowledge from classical epidemiology, with that of biology, ecology, social sciences, and other disciplines, and link this with informal, tacit knowledge from experts and affected populations. It can help to uncover wider-reaching but difficult-to-identify processes that directly or indirectly influence exposure, infection, transmission, and disease development, as well as how these interrelate and impact one another. Drawing on systems epidemiology to address persisting disease hotspots, failed intervention programmes, and systematically neglected population groups in mass drug administration programmes and research studies, can help overcome barriers in the progress towards schistosomiasis elimination. Generating a comprehensive view of the schistosomiasis system as a whole should thus be a priority research agenda towards the strategic goal of morbidity control and transmission elimination.
Date Issued
2019-01-29
Date Acceptance
2019-01-24
Citation
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 2019, 4 (1)
ISSN
2414-6366
Publisher
MDPI
Journal / Book Title
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
Volume
4
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
© 2019 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited (CC BY 4.0 - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30699922
PII: tropicalmed4010021
Subjects
complexity
interdisciplinarity
neglected tropical diseases
schistosomiasis
systems epidemiology
systems thinking
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
Switzerland
Article Number
21
Date Publish Online
2019-01-29