• Title of article

    Bore holes and the vanishing of guinea worm disease in Ghanaʹs Upper Region

  • Author/Authors

    John M. Hunter، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    19
  • From page
    71
  • To page
    89
  • Abstract
    Ghanaʹs Upper Region provides an excellent example of the beneficial effects of improved water security provided by hand-pump tube wells. Following a Ghana-Canada bilateral development project that installed some 2500 pumps, protection rates against guinea worm disease may be estimated as 88% in the west, and 96% in the east. Survey comparisons between ca 1960 and 1990 show that dracunculiasis declined in 32 of a total of 38 areas. The shadow of guinea worm has been lifted from the land and, in many areas, a true “vanishing” has occurred. The few areas of disease increase are characterized by the lowest population densities, pioneer settlement for cotton farming, and an absence of bore holes. Vagaries of development have inadvertently produced disease transformations or “metamorphoses” from dracunculiasis to elephantiasis (lymphatic filariasis) in one area, and to red water disease (schistosomiasis hematobium) in other areas. Correlative associations between pump densities and guinea worm disease are weakened by the large size of areas for which disease is reported in 1990. One preliminary finding is that geographical distance to the pump is a stronger influence than demographic pressure on pumps, regarding dracunculiasis. Diminishing returns on higher pump densities in many areas support the idea of making fuller, safer use of supplementary non-pump water. Despite crises of fee payment and pump maintenance, the rural bore hole project has struck a mortal blow against guinea worm, and permanently raised the quality of life in the Upper Region.
  • Keywords
    guinea worm , dracunculiasis , Disease control , tube wells , bore holes , Ghana , hand pumps
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    599429