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Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Fw: Ref.: (LML) ‘Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting’ event (June 1st), online`

 

 
Leprosy Mailing List – May 31,  2023

 

Ref.:  (LML) Reminder: 'Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting' event (June 1st), online

 

From:  Leprosy Research Initiative, Amsterdam, the Netherlands


 

Dear colleagues,



Only one day left for the 'Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting'! This year, as part of the 10-year anniversary celebrations, LRI is hosting an online "Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting " event on June 1st, from 14:00-16:30 CEST to allow for participation globally.   Don't miss out on the opportunity to watch the showcasing of selected project progress presentations from the in-person meeting, and a special LRI 10-year anniversary session dedicated to commemorating LRI's remarkable decade-long journey.   This event is open to everyone with an interest in leprosy research and participation is completely free-of-charge. Find the programme of the event here. Secure your spot by registering today and we hope to see you online tomorrow!


Register to event



 



Leprosy Research Initiative

Wibautstraat 137k
Amsterdam, NH 1097 DN
Netherlands
Netherlands
info@leprosyresearch.org

LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter Schreuder << editorlml@gmail.com

 

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Thursday, May 11, 2023

Fw: Ref.: (LML) Call for applications for the position of Special Rapporteur on the elimination of discrimination against persons affected by leprosy and their family members

 

 

 
Leprosy Mailing List – May 11,  2023

 

Ref.:  (LML) Call for applications for the position of Special Rapporteur on the elimination of discrimination against persons affected by leprosy and their family members

From:  Alice Cruz, Quinto, Ecuador


 

 

Dear colleagues,

 

I am sharing the call for applications for the position of Special Rapporteur on the elimination of discrimination against persons affected by leprosy and their family members. Kindly find attached.

 

Please keep in mind that it is still necessary that the Human Rights Council approves the extension of the leprosy mandate next July. In case it does not, whoever is selected will not be appointed.

 

Please share the information with your network (see also the attached file)!

 

I would appreciate if those of you who are in contact with organizations of persons affected by leprosy could share this with them. I will also do that.

 

The more positive next step forward would certainly be if a person affected by leprosy could take the position.

 

Good luck!

 

Alice


LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter Schreuder << editorlml@gmail.com

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Saturday, May 6, 2023

Fw: Ref.: (LML) Smear microscopy & transmission in India

 

 
Leprosy Mailing List – May 6,  2023

 

Ref.:  (LML) Smear microscopy & transmission in India

From:  Joel Almeida, Mumbai, India


 

Dear Pieter and colleagues,

 

Recent reports are that smear microscopy is increasingly being reintroduced in India. This will greatly improve the chances of diagnosing the new or reinfected "de novo" LL patients. They can show almost no physical signs, even while shedding tens of millions of viable bacilli per day.(1)  It will allow anti-microbial protection for these patients who otherwise suffer a greatly increased risk of excruciatingly painful ENL neuritis (2).  It will also protect the population who otherwise would face a relentless avalanche of viable bacilli.

 

There is no substitute for detection and anti-microbial protection of anergic "de novo" LL patients. Epidemiological stagnation has been observable during the past two decades, even in areas of the world where chemoprophylaxis with single dose rifampicin for household contacts was implemented diligently for several years (e.g., Sampang, Bima, Sumenep in Indonesia). (3)  Without prolonged anti-microbial protection of LL patients in endemic areas the incidence rate of MB (multibacillary) HD is likely to remain roughly level for decades, or to decline very slowly. Chemoprophylaxis among contacts  cannot cope with the relentless onslaught of astronomical numbers of viable bacilli from unprotected LL patients who are (re)infected but show no prominent signs. The resulting failure to achieve rapid reduction in transmission is wholly avoidable.

 

It may take a leap of imagination to move from the forward-contact-tracing habits of the past to a mindset of backward contact tracing. In forward contact tracing we have been allowing the avalanche of viable bacilli to continue. Then we look for the infected contacts. Backward contact tracing seeks to identify and treat the small minority of cases who are responsible for nearly all the viable bacilli shed in diseases such as HD. It is like plugging the hole in the dam. The dominant source of astronomical numbers of concentrated viable bacilli is shut down. This works powerfully.

 

Transmission by previously treated but reinfected LL patients is easily avoidable. Whenever LL patients in endemic areas receive prolonged anti-microbial protection, reinfection and transmission decline rapidly. This is illustrated by the well-documented declines in incidence rate of multibacillary HD in Uele, Karigiri and Weifang/Shandong. (4-6)  These rapid declines occurred despite conspicuously low incomes in those places at the time. Further, prolonged anti-microbial protection of LL patients in endemic areas can avert as much as a 600% increase in the risk of painful ENL neuritis among these patients (2). 

 

In endemic areas, prolonged multi-drug protection of LL patients and mass multi-drug administration (7) each have powerful epidemiological impact. This is because they shut down sources of infection, without selecting drug-resistant bacilli. "Ping-pong reinfection" between newly diagnosed and previously treated LL patients is stopped. Then transmission declines rapidly. Otherwise ping-pong reinfection between persons with polar LL genomes, especially within households, can maintain transmission indefinitely. Multi-case LL households and previously treated LL patients requiring prolonged anti-microbial protection are each an important source of transmission. For example, in Salaunikhurd village of Chhattisgarh, India, with multi-case LL households and highly bacillated but previously treated patients, the incidence rate of new cases over 4 years was as high as 10,000/million/year (100/10,000 persons/yr). (8) 

 

The multi-case families in Salaunikhurd village had average cash incomes of the order of only 4 US cents/person/day. That is cents, not dollars. 29% of the villagers were illiterate. These people do not have a prominent voice, nor access to reliable scientific information. They are poorly placed to demand the anti-microbial protection they need. As privileged persons with scientific knowledge, we can choose to speak out for them and ensure prolonged anti-microbial protection, together with the mass multi-drug administration that was so highly impactful in FS Micronesia. (7)  Science and compassion both point in the same direction, as do the noble values of our community.

 

Fact-based epidemiology, combined with respect for the human dignity and rights of patients in endemic areas, enables effective action with measurable epidemiological impact. It can be helpful to piece together epidemiological clues, while looking beyond selective non-publication (e.g., of findings regarding the repeatedly disappointing impact of single dose rifampicin among household contacts).

 

India is moving in the right direction by increasingly relying on smear microscopy to detect the few but very important "de novo" LL cases. Such cases, whether newly infected or re-infected,  are often missed by health workers because the patients can feel almost no discomfort and often show no skin patches.(8) We could applaud such productive moves by India, and allow elbow room for endemic countries to succeed. 

A prerequisite for technical advice could usefully be that it has been shown to produce strong epidemiological impact. Otherwise ineffective technical advice, with little or no impact on transmission or even with selection of drug-resistant mutant bacilli, could displace more effective approaches.

 

Is it a bad idea to learn from highly effective interventions demonstrated by successful projects in endemic countries? Are we against respect for the human dignity of patients? Are we against rapid decline in transmission?

 

Joel Almeida

 

 

References

 

1.      Davey TF, Rees RJ. The nasal dicharge in leprosy: clinical and bacteriological aspects. Lepr Rev. 1974 Jun;45(2):121-34.

 

2.     Balagon MVF, Gelber RH, Abalos RM, Cellona RV. Reactions following completion of 1 and 2 year multidrug therapy (MDT) Am J Trop Med Hyg  2010 Sep;83(3):637-44. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2010.09-0586, reviewed and analysed further in 2a. Almeida J, Are we against preventing painful ENL neuritis? LML 26 March 2023

 

3.     Yosephine P. Report presented at WHO Global Consultation with NLP Managers, Partners, and Affected Persons on Global Leprosy Strategy 2021-2030. 28 October 2020

 

4.      Norman G, Bhushanam JDRS, Samuel P. Trends in leprosy over 50 years in Gudiyatham Taluk, Vellore, Tamil Nadu. Ind J Lepr 2006. 78(2): 167-185. reviewed and analysed further in: 3a. Almeida J. Karigiri, India: How transmission rapidly was reduced in a low-income population.  LML 29 Oct 2020


5.     Tonglet R, Pattyn SR, Nsansi BN et al. The reduction of the leprosy endemicity in northeastern Zaire 1975/1989 J.Eur J Epidemiol. 1990 Dec;6(4):404-6 reviewed in: 4a. Almeida J. Reducing transmission in poor hyperendemic areas - evidence from Uele (DRC). LML 29 Nov 2019

6.    Li HY, Weng XM, Li T et al. Long-Term Effect of Leprosy Control in Two Prefectures of China, 1955-1993. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis. 1995 Jun;63(2):213-221. reviewed & analysed further in: 5a. Almeida J. What really happened in Shandong? LML 16 Nov 2019

 

7.      WORKSHOP ON THE PREVENTION OF LEPROSY, POHNPEI, FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA. 25-27 MAY 1999 sponsored by the Sasakawa Memorial Health Foundation Tokyo, Japan and the Western Pacific Regional Office of the World Health Organization. Int J Lepr, 67 (4) (SUPPLEMENT)

 

8.    Gitte S, Rewaria L, Santaram V, Jamil S. Descriptive Study of High Leprosy Endemic Pockets and Exploring Occurrence Factors of Multicase Families in the Village

of Salaunikhurd of Chhattisgarh State. Int J Med. Public Health. 2021; 11(2):113-117

 

 


LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter Schreuder << editorlml@gmail.com

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Thursday, May 4, 2023

Fw: Ref.: (LML) Reflections on LRI Spring Meeting – Register for online Highlights event on 1 June




 

 

 
Leprosy Mailing List – April 5,  2023

 

Ref.:  (LML) Reflections on LRI Spring Meeting – Register for online Highlights event on 1 June

 

 

From:  LRI, Amsterdam, the Netherlands


 

Dear colleagues,

 

In this communication, we are pleased to share reflections of the in-person LRI Spring Meeting, and call for registration for the online 'Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting' event.

Reflections on in-person LRI Spring Meeting
The Eighth annual Leprosy Research Initiative Spring Meeting was held on 20-21 April 2023 in Breukelen, the Netherlands. This in-person event brought together over 80 attendees from 20 countries, including LRI-funded researchers, LRI committee members, partners of LRI, and other attendees with a particular interest in leprosy research.

 

The Spring Meeting is an important event for presenting and discussing progress and results from ongoing LRI-funded research projects and a platform for shared learning and networking. According to Dr. Richard Truman, Chair of the LRI Scientific Review Committee, "this year's Spring Meeting was a resounding success, showcasing high-quality presentations and encouraging scholarly, social, and personal interactions among individuals in the leprosy world." Ms Linda Hummel, Director of LRI, emphasised that the importance of collaboration and scientific quality as LRI's identity was evident throughout the event. The two days were filled with scientific presentations, interactive sessions and opportunities for interactions. In total, 31 progress presentations were given on ongoing projects covering all five LRI research priorities and the R2STOP Initiative presented key outcomes of their funded projects. On Friday afternoon, participants attended thematic sessions on topics of their preference including transmission, research capacity strengthening, and mental wellbeing, all sparking lively discussions. In addition, the occasion was particularly noteworthy as we commemorated the 10th anniversary of LRI. All those involved were gratefully acknowledged and an overview of LRI's milestones to date was proudly presented.


 Leprosy Research Initiative 10 year highlights animation see attached file!

 

 



 


 

 

 

 

 

 

We look back on an inspiring LRI Spring Meeting 2023, also reflected in the overwhelmingly positive feedback from the participants: "You end up seeing research results in areas that you do not work in all the time. Great for broadening perspectives of the disease." "The opportunity of network and engagement outside of the organised sessions is priceless."   We will review participants' suggestions and look forward to welcome you at the LRI Spring Meeting 2024!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Online 'Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting' event coming on June 1st This year, as part of the 10-year anniversary celebrations, LRI will also be hosting an online "Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting " event on June 1st, from 14:00-16:30 CEST to allow for participation globally. The event will include the showcasing of selected project progress presentations from the in-person meeting, and a special LRI 10-year anniversary session. This event is open to everyone with an interest in leprosy research and participation is completely free-of-charge. To participate in the event, please complete the registration form and you will receive the meeting link closer to the date Further event details and programme will become available on the LRI website soon. We are excited.

 

 

 

Leprosy Research Initiative

Wibautstraat 137k

1097DN Amsterdam

The Netherlands

 

info@leprosyresearch.org

Register for the Highlights event




LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter

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Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Fw: Ref.: (LML) Infolep monthly overview of new publications on leprosy. May, 2023

 


Leprosy Mailing List – May 4,  2023

 

Ref.:  (LML) Infolep monthly overview of new publications on leprosy. May, 2023

 

From:  Roos Geutjes and Josephine Breman-Srivastava, Amsterdam, the Netherlands


 


Dear colleagues,

Save the dates! The Bergen International Conference on Hansen's Disease: 150 Years Since the Discovery of the Leprosy Bacillus will take place June 21-22, 2023, in Bergen, Norway. The conference is organized by Sasakawa Leprosy (Hansen's Disease) Initiative and the University of Bergen in Norway. On the 1st of May the International Leprosy Mission is hosting an online webinar on PEP: A discussion. Additionally, the NTD Innovation Prize 2023 submission portal has been opened. Deadline is the 15th of May. 

The WHO South-Eastern Asian Office (SEARO) is requesting for organizations, researchers, and doctors to share clinical images of Skin-related diseases and NTDs. SEARO is planning to develop a training toolkit that can be utilized by peripheral healthcare workers who see patients that are affected by skin-diseases first-hand. Please support the development of this toolkit and click here to find out more about how you can share clinical images. Together we #beatNTDs!

On the 20-21st of April the 8th Annual Leprosy Research Initiative Spring meeting was held in the Netherlands. Below you can find a reflection on the in-person meeting and information on the online "Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting" event that will take place on the 1st of June. This meeting is open to anyone and free-of-charge.
 
Enjoy reading the latest publications that are listed below. Feel free to contact us to receive the full-text versions when these cannot be found on Infolep. We would also be happy to assist you with literature searches. 


Warm regards,

Roos Geutjes & Josephine Breman-Srivastava

www.leprosy-information.org
info@infolep.org
 

 



 



LRI Spring Meeting 2023

 



The Eighth Annual Leprosy Research Initiative (LRI) Spring Meeting was held on 20-21 April, 2023, in Breukelen, the Netherlands. The event was held in-person again after three years and was attended by over 80 participants from 20 countries, including LRI-funded researchers, LRI committee members, partners of LRI, and other attendees with a particular interest in leprosy research. The Spring Meeting aimed to facilitate presenting and discussing of progress and results from ongoing LRI-funded research projects and offer a platform for shared learning and networking. The two-day event was packed with scientific presentations from projects across all five LRI research priorities, interactive thematic sessions on transmission, capacity strengthening and mental wellbeing, and plenty of opportunities for interactions.  The occasion was particularly celebratory as 2023 marks the 10th anniversary of LRI.

 


 

On the 1st of June LRI is organising an online "Highlights of LRI Spring Meeting" event, which will feature selected project progress presentations from the in-person meeting and a special LRI 10-year anniversary session. The event is free-of-charge and open to anyone interested in leprosy research. To join, simply fill out the registration form and you will receive the meeting link closer to the date. Further event details and programme will become available on the LRI website soon.
For any enquiries contact LRI at: info@leprosyresearch.org.


 

 



 



Highlighted

 



International Symposium at the Vatican on Hansen's Disease "Leave No One Behind" - Global Appeal 2023
Sasakawa Leprosy Initiative . 2023.
 


Leprosy reactions after SARSCOV2 (COVID19) infection
Gutiérrez
Villarreal IM, OcampoCandiani J, VillarrealMartinez A, et al. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. Wiley. 2023
 


Antimicrobial Stewardship Program: Time to be focused in speciality settings of leprosy institute and related health care setup
Thangaraju P, Velmurugan H, Venkatesan S. Recent Advances in Anti-Infective Drug Discovery. Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.. 2023.
 


Leprosy-causing bacteria found in armadillo specimens highlight value of museum collections for tracking pathogens
Romero-Alvarez D. San Francisco Chronicle. 2023.
 

 



 



New publications


Feel free to contact us to receive full-text versions if these cannot be found through the Infolep portal.

 



Hanseniasis
Eidt LM. Dermatology in Public Health Environments. Springer International Publishing. 2023.
 


Be aware: 'Leprosy'! Not for nothing an NTD
Naafs B. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. Wiley. 2023.
 


Leukocyte and Platelet-Rich Fibrin (LPRF) Therapy & Leprosy: the Need for Caution and Research Among Marginalised Groups in Low Resource Settings
Houghton F, Stritch M, Tamang K, et al. Medicina Internacia Revuo . Universala Medicina Esperanto Asocio. 2022.
 


CD11bGr-1 cells that accumulate in M.leprae-induced granulomas of the footpad skin of nude mice have the characteristics of monocytic-myeloid-derived suppressor cells
Jin S, Lee S. Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland). 2023.
 


Determinant factors of leprosy-related disability; comparison of acceleration failure time and parametric shared frailty models
Masresha BM, Yesuf KM, Moyehodie YA, et al. PLOS ONE. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2023; 18 (4) : 1-26.
 


Genotyping of Mycobacterium leprae strains in south central coast and central highlands of Vietnam
Chau H, Nguyen P, Nguyen H. Iranian Journal of Microbiology. Tehran University of Medical Sciences. 2023; 15 (2) : 201-207.
 


Clinico-Epidemiological profile of new leprosy cases detected in leprosy case detection campaign in North Maharashtra during 2018-2020.
Surywanshi S, Lokhande G. Indian journal of public health. 2023; 67 (1) : 152-154.
 


Spatial Modeling of leprosy disease in east java province with spatially varying regression coefficients models.
Chotimah H, Jaya I. Indian journal of public health. 2022; 66 (4) : 501-503.
 


Leprosy & Broken Bacilli on Slit Skin Smear
Sukanya G, Manoharan K, Logeswari P, et al. QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians. QJM: An International Journal of Medicine. 2023.
 


Inhibitory effect of natural compounds on Dihydropteroate synthase of Mycobacterium leprae: Molecular dynamic study.
Khan M, Khan S, Bushara N, et al. Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics. Taylor & Francis Online. 2023.
 


Hanseníase em uma região semiárida da Bahia: uma análise de 2001 a 2017
Lima IFD, Braga IO, Melo IFDSAAD, et al. Revista de Medicina. Universidade de Sao Paulo, Agencia USP de Gestao da Informacao Academica (AGUIA). 2023; 102 (2) : 1-8.
 


Conhecimento e vivências sobre hanseníase: enfermeiros na atenção terciária
Santos CMMFD, Tavares CM, Santos MIF, et al. Revista JRG de Estudos Acadêmicos. Revista JRG de Estudos Academicos. 2023; 6 (12) : 389-401.
 


Práticas integrativas e complementares em pacientes com hanseníase
Oliveira-Pinto AVD, Serafim ERCN, Neto JFV, et al. Práticas Integrativas e Complementares: visão holística e multidisciplinar - Volume 3. Editora Científica Digital. 2023.
 


O combate à hanseníase no programa Saúde na Escola
dos Santos T, Kopiake K, Wittes E. Nativa–Revista de Ciências Sociais do Norte de Mato Grosso. 2023; 11 (1) : 1-9.
 


Diagnóstico epidemiológico da hanseníase no município de Vitória do Mearim - Maranhão
Bastos Junior JL, Maciel TBS, Silva ENR, et al. Ciências da Saúde: desafios e potencialidades em pesquisa - Volume 2. Editora Científica Digital. 2023.
 


Clitoria ternatea L. Extract as Adjuvant Therapy on Reducing IL–6 Levels in Reversal Reaction
N. S NA, Muniroh M, Kusumaningrum N, et al. Biosaintifika: Journal of Biology &amp; Biology Education. Universitas Negeri Semarang. 2023; 15 (1) : 105-111.
 


Características socioeconomicas e epidemiológicas da hanseníase no Maranhão
Oliveira TS, Soeiro VMDS, Soares DL, et al. Saúde Coletiva (Barueri). MPM Comunicacao. 2023; 13 (85) : 12612-12627.
 


Implementação de um manual de adesão terapêutica ao paciente acometido pela Hanseníase
Pinheiro AM, Mello AGNC, Pinheiro ECC, et al. Ciência em foco: Volume XII. Pantanal Editora. 2023.
 


Evaluation of histopathological changes in Hansen's disease spectrum: A cross-sectional study from central India
Chauhan S, Choudhary V, Rathoriya S, et al. International Journal of Life Sciences Biotechnology and Pharma Research. 2023; 2 (2) : 696-701.
 


The application of digital health as a nursing solution for leprosy patients during the COVID-19 pandemic: A systematic review
Dahoklory D, Haryanto J, Indarwati R. Journal of Pakistan Medical Association. 2023.
 

 


Difficulties coping with leprosy during treatment and post-discharge
Sousa JDN, Costa REARD, Muniz RKB, et al. Rev Enferm UFPI. Universidade Federal do Piaui. 2023; 12 (1) : 1-9.
 


Prevalence, Characteristics and Socio-Demographic Correlates of Self-Stigma among Leprosy Affected Persons - A Case Study
Bhat L., Vaida N., Hassan I, et al. Indian Journal of Leprosy. 2023.
 


Association between asthma, rhinitis and atopic dermatitis with leprosy: A case-control study
Tenório M, Araujo J, de Melo E, et al. Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology. 2023.
 


Mycobacterium leprae and host immune transcriptomic signatures for reactional states in leprosy
Das M, David D, Horo I, et al. Frontiers in Microbiology. Frontiers Media SA. 2023.
 


High prevalence of olfactory impairment among leprosy patients: A cross-sectional study
Kondo RN, Araújo MCPD, Ramos PM, et al. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2023; 17 (4) : 1-11.
 


Critical observation of WHO recommended multidrug therapy on the disease leprosy through mathematical study
Ghosh S, Saha S, Roy PK. Journal of Theoretical Biology. Elsevier BV. 2023.
 


Analysis of the Incidence of Leprosy in the Northeast Region of Brazil: 2011 to 2021
Kramer D. G., Sousa A. M., Lins M. L. B. C.. Indian Journal of Leprosy. Hind Kusht Nivaran Sangh. 2023.
 


Epidemiological Indicators Under National Leprosy Eradication Program In Wardha District Of Maharashtra - A Five-Year Trend Analysis
Sundar R. N. S., Giri M. World Journal of Pharmaceutical Research. 2023; 12 (5) : 766-773.
 


Serological testing for Hansen's disease diagnosis: Clinical significance and performance of IgA, IgM, and IgG antibodies against Mce1A protein
Lima F, Simões M, Manso G, et al. Frontiers in medicine. 2023.
 


Methotrexate as a corticosteroid-sparing agent in leprosy reactions: A French multicenter retrospective study.
Jaume L, Hau E, Monsel G, et al. PLoS neglected tropical diseases. 2023; 17 (4) : e0011238
 


Dendritic Cell Activation in Leprosy Using CD1a and Factor XIIIa Markers
K K, S S, K S. Cureus. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 2023.
 


Assistência da enfermagem no protocolo de diagnóstico da hanseníase na atenção básica
dos Santos S, Marcelino J, Rocha E, et al. Revista Científica. UniAtenas. 2022; 14 (6) : 1-10.
 


Desabamento da pirâmide nasal em paciente com hanseníase Virchowiana: um relato de caso que mostra como a hanseníase ainda é negligenciada no Brasil
Melo ACCFDS, Azevedo RLFD, Azevedo MVCD, et al. E-Acadêmica. e-Academica. 2023; 4 (1) : 1-7.
 


La lepra persiste como una prioridad en la salud global
Franco-Paredes C. UO Medical Affairs. 2023; 2 (1) : 33-39.
 


Análise das ações de controle e combate da hanseníase em menores de 15 anos em Cacoal-RO
Araújo NV, Moraes AS, Cruz JR. Ciências da Saúde: desafios e potencialidades em pesquisa - Volume 2. Editora Científica Digital. 2022.
 


Lepra en armadillos. Parte I: museos y tejidos
Romero-Alvarez D. Daniel Romero-Alvarez. 2023.
 


Pelatihan pemeriksaan prevention of disability (POD) kusta pada tenaga Kesehatan dan kader di Kabupaten Prabumulih
Nopriyati , Rusmawardiana , Argentina F, et al. Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat: Humanity and Medicine. Fakultas Kedokteran Universitas Sriwijaya. 2023; 4 (1) : 44-51.
 


Risk Factors for Erythema Nodosum Leprosum: A Case Control Study in a Tertiary Hospital of Western Odisha, India
Nayak D, Padhi T, Marandi P, et al. Indian Journal of Leprosy. Hind Kusht Nivaran Sangh. 2023.
 


Spatial Distribution of Leprosy Cases Notified in a Reference Center in the Municipality of Várzea Grande – MT, Brazil
Duarte V.M.S, Machado L.M.G, Santos E.S.D, et al. Indian Journal of Leprosy. Hind Kusht Nivaran Sangh. 2023.
 


Interplay among differential exposure to Mycobacterium leprae and TLR4 polymorphism impacts the immune response in household contacts of leprosy patients
Cunha EHM, Marçal PHF, Gama RS, et al. Frontiers in Immunology. Frontiers Media SA. 2023.
 


A leprosy museum in Portugal
Eggens H. 2023

 



 



 



News & Events

 



The Bergen International Conference on Hansen's Disease: 150 Years Since the Discovery of the Leprosy Bacillus
June 21-22, 2023. Bergen, Norway
 

The conference is organized by Sasakawa Leprosy (Hansen's Disease) Initiative and the University of Bergen in Norway. It will bring together key leprosy stakeholders from around the world for two days of discussions focused on three pillars: medical, social, and historical. The Bergen Conference is an opportunity to draw on the knowledge, experience and wisdom of many people at the place where M.leprae was first observed 150 years ago, and to build momentum to complete "the last mile in leprosy".
 


Leprosy Mission International Webinar on PEP: A discussion
June 1, at 12:00 CEST. Online

The Leprosy Mission International are hosting an online discussion panel to unpack the misconceptions, challenges, and potential of PEP. World's leading PEP experts will be asked questions to help unpack the potential and the challenges of making PEP happen.
 


NTD Innovation Prize 2023

The NTD Innovation Hub opened the submission portal for the 2023 Innovation Prize. This year they will accept submissions that leverage mapping and spatial analysis to target NTD interventions.
Deadline of submission is May 15.
 


Massive open online course (MOOC) on implementation research

TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, has launched a Massive open online course (MOOC) on implementation research: infectious diseases of poverty. The next start date is May 8.
 


Frontiers in Pharmacology Call for Articles

The journal Frontiers is calling for articles that highlight potentially novel pharmacological targets and new therapeutics or interventions to treat Neglected Global Diseases. Authors and institutions from  low- or middle-income countries. 
Abstract submission deadline is August 2; and Manuscript submission is December 6.
 


Request Letter for Clinical Images for SEARO Skin NTD Training Toolkit

The WHO South-Eastern Asian Office (SEARO) has shared a request for organizations, researchers, and doctors to share clinical images of Skin-NTDs. SEARO is planning to create a training toolkit that can be utilized by healthcare workers who see patients affected by skin-diseases first-hand. 
 

 


NNN Conference 2023
September 19-21, 2023

The NNN Conference 2023 will take place at the Hyatt Regency in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. The theme for this years' conference is: "Reaching new frontiers - powering a new generation of leadership and cross-sectoral collaborations to end NTDs." The theme reflects NNN's commitment to cross sectoral collaborations and partnerships centering endemic voices in the fight against NTDS.
 


Call for Submissions 2023 | NNN 

NNN has opened the submission portal for its 2023 Annual Conference workshops and Rapid-Fire sessions. The workshops are supposed to be 90 minutes. The Rapid Fire are supposed to be 9-12 minutes, followed by a Q&A session. For more information on the sub-themes of the conference and the submission guidance document please refer to the NNN website linked above. Deadline of submission is 5th of May
 


COR-NTD Annual Meeting
October 16-17, 2023

The COR-NTD Annual Meeting will be held in October in Chicago. The meeting will consists of hybrid plenary sessions, in-person breakout sessions, and a virtual Innovation Lab.
 


COR- NTD Innovation Lab 2023
October 17, 2023

If you have recently been involved with the development of a new strategy, technology or tool with the potential to help NTD programs, you can apply to the Annual COR-NTD Meeting Innovation Lab, to be held virtually on October 17, 2023. This is an opportunity to showcase your innovation for researchers, donors and program implementers attending the meeting. Application Deadline is June 15.
 


CNNTD AWARD for Outstanding Canadian NTD Research Paper in 2023

The Canadian Network for Neglected Tropical Diseases (CNNTD) launched an Awards competition to recognize an outstanding Canadian partnership research contribution in the field of neglected tropical diseases. Any researcher based at a Canadian academic or research institution: graduate student, postdoctoral fellow, scientist or faculty member. The primary (first) or senior (last) author must be a researcher based at a Canadian academic or research institution. There is no limit to the number or location of other authors. Deadline of submission is May 14th.

 



 



Links

 



Info Hansen - A innovative hub for knowledge sharing about Hansen's Disease
 


ALLF - Official website of the Association des Léprologues de Langue Française
 


LML - Leprosy Mailing List - a free moderated email list that allows all persons interested in leprosy to share ideas, information, experiences and questions
 


InfoNTD - Information on cross-cutting issues in Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs)

 


ILEP newsletter archive


GPZL newsletter subscription


WHO Goodwill Ambassador's Leprosy Bulletin


Leprosy Review


Leprosy Review Repository (1928-2001)


Fontilles Revista de Leprología


Indian Journal of Leprosy


Hansenologia Internationalis

 




GDPR & the Infolep newsletter

 
New EU data protection regulations came into force on 25 May 2018. We have been reviewing our practices with regards to the GDPR, including our privacy statement and mailing list.

Infolep sends out monthly e-mails with an overview of recent publications on leprosy and related issues. The purpose of this activity is to keep subscribers up to date.

Infolep will only process the data we have (names, email addresses) for the purpose of sending you the newsletter. We take your security seriously and will never share your contact details with anyone else.

You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list at any time.

 


 



 


LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter Schreuder << editorlml@gmail.com

 

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