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Relapsing fever, a disappearing cause of fever and maternal death in Sengerema, Tanzania, east Africa


P Melkert
L Kahema
J van der Velden
J van Roosmalen

Abstract

Objective: To study the incidence of tick borne relapsing fever (TBRF) during the last 50 years, once like malaria an endemic disease in Sengerema, Tanzania.
Design: By analyzing the annual reports, focusing on the number of admissions, maternal deaths, blood smears of patients with fever for Borrelia.
Setting: Sengerema district, Tanzania.
Subject: Admissions in Sengerema Hospital due to TBRF.
Main Outcome Measures: From 1960 to 2010, we analyzed the incidence of TBRF.
Result: Forty annual admissions in the sixties/seventies, 200 in the eighties (range from 37 in 1964 to 455 in 1988), dropping to 30 in the nineties. For the last nine years no Borrelia spirochetes were found in blood smears at the laboratory anymore and no admissions for TBRF were  registered. The number of maternal deaths due to relapsing fever  decreased simultaneously; the last one recorded was in 2002.
Conclusion: During the last century, we have witnessed the disappearing of tick borne relapsing fever in Sengerema. Increase of gold mining,  improved local economy, housing and standards of living after the nineties resulted in an almost complete eradication of the incidence of TBRF.

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eISSN: 0012-835X