Jessica
Ata hasn`'t been to River Aswa since 2014, when she was diagnosed with river
blindness.
Back then, 1.5
million people in Uganda were affected by onchocerciasis that is carried by the
blackfly.
The vector
thrives along water rapids like this one that runs through several districts.
With the return
of rains, there has been a surge in black flies.
The community
just outside the city of Gulu is in fear, haunted by a tropical disease that
has permanently impaired the vision of many in the region.
“I sometimes
feel a buzzing sound in my ears. My head hurts like I am being hit”, says
Jessica Ata referring to her condition.
Ten years ago,
Uganda had successfully interrupted the transmission of river blindness with
aggressive initiatives including deploying airplanes to spray chemicals that
killed black flies. Now experts are worried there could already be cases.
“We have taken
long without conducting the spraying and as a result they are having good
breeding ground and possibly that could explain why the numbers of black flies
are increasing. And it is all worrying us, first of all it indicates that we
are at a very high risk of getting river blindness again – resurgence of river
blindness in the region”, said Dr. Kenneth Cana, aciting district health
officer for Gulu.
Even worse,
scientists have suggested black flies may be the cause of nodding syndrome but
available data is not conclusive.
Villagers who
inherently depend on this river must find ways of avoiding the deadly bites.
“Children who
come here to do swimming and fishing, those ones are highly affected because
when you come to the river in the morning you can get the flies when they are
still in an open place", says local leader of Paget Parish, Ongwec
Phillips Agela.
Africanews
correspondent Raziah Athman concludes:
“With the sun
above my head, you can`t see swarms of black flies until later in the day when
the temperature drops. And there have also been community interventions like
slashing and clearing breeding sites, and the installation of trapping nets
along the river bank.”
The government
conducts mass drug administration twice a year to treat river blindness and has
achieved 90 per cent treatment coverage in rural areas. But still, thousands of
people near the river are at risk of infection from the increasing
blackflies".
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