Browsing by Autor "Manuel Gonzales"
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Item type: Item , Building Trust through Lymphatic Filariasis Elimination: A Platform to Address Social Exclusion and Human Rights in the Dominican Republic.(National Institutes of Health, 2018) Hunter Keys; Manuel Gonzales; Madsen Beau de Rochars; Stephen Blount; Gregory S. NolandHispaniola, the Caribbean island that includes the countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic (DR), accounts for 90% of lymphatic filariasis (LF) in the Americas. Both countries have committed to LF elimination by 2020. In the DR, LF occurs mainly in <i>bateyes</i>, or company towns that historically hosted migrant laborers from Haiti. A legacy of anti-Haitian discrimination as well as the 2013 <i>Sentencia</i>, which stripped generations of Haitian-descended Dominicans of their citizenship, ensure that this population remains legally, economically, and socially marginalized. Despite this context, the country's LF elimination program (PELF) has worked in <i>bateyes</i> to eliminate LF through health education and annual drug treatment to interrupt parasite transmission. Based on interviews with <i>batey</i> residents and observations of PELF activities from February-April 2016, this study describes local understandings of social exclusion alongside the PELF community-based approach. The <i>Sentencia</i> reinforced a common perception shared by <i>batey</i> residents: that their lives were unimportant, even unrecognized, in Dominican society. At the same time, the government-run PELF has generated trust in government health activities and partially counteracts some of the effects of social exclusion. These findings suggest that neglected tropical disease (NTD) programs can not only improve the health of marginalized populations, but also create a platform for improving human rights.Item type: Item , The impact of integrating the elimination programme for lymphatic filariasis into primary health care in the Dominican Republic(Wiley, 2007) Margaret Baker; Deborah A. McFarland; Manuel Gonzales; Mary Janet Diaz; David MolyneuxIntegration of disease-specific programmes into existing health care delivery systems is a challenge for many countries, made more salient as the scope and scale of disease-specific programmes increases. This paper reports on the programmatic outcomes of 2 years of integrating the lymphatic filariasis (LF) elimination programme into primary health care (PHC) in the Dominican Republic during a period of national health care reform and decentralization. Data were collected retrospectively from community volunteers, PHC staff and LF programme staff using a mix of quantitative and qualitative methods. Benefits of integration for LF elimination included increasing the extent of the geographic coverage of mass drug administration (MDA) and a 21% increase in municipalities achieving the MDA target coverage rate of 80%. Benefits which accrued to PHC included improved information systems and strengthened relationships between the health services and the community. This study also identified challenges to implementing integration and the solutions found. These include the importance of focusing on the professional development of disease-specific program staff as their roles change, strengthening specific weakness in the general health system and finding alternative solutions where these are not easily solved, actively engaging senior management at an early stage, continually evaluating the impact of integration and not pushing integration for the sake of integration.