Editor's Note on Press Opportunity:
President Carter will join a representative from the Southern Sudan Ministry of Health and Mr. Makoy Samuel Yibi Logora of the Southern Sudan Guinea Worm Eradication Program for a Guinea worm disease-focused press conference in Juba at 3 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11. Press must arrive by 2:30 p.m. to complete check-in before doors close. Press credentials and security sweep required. Additional details will be provided closer to the event. No one-on-one interviews are being scheduled during President Carter’s visit.
ATLANTA…Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, will travel to the world’s most Guinea worm-endemic country—Sudan—Feb. 9-12, 2010, to personally appeal for completing eradication of the crippling waterborne parasite as soon as possible and to urge peace and stability in the nation as it prepares for its first multi-party elections in 24 years in April, which the Carter Center’s international election observation team will monitor.
The Carter Center delegation will meet with officials in Khartoum and Juba, as well as visit a Guinea worm-endemic community in Southern Sudan, the most highly endemic region in the world. President Carter will join a representative from the Southern Sudan Ministry of Health for a Guinea worm eradication-focused press conference in Juba.
President Carter and Carter Center believe that with continued hard work and dedication, Guinea worm disease will soon become the second disease eradicated from Earth—after smallpox—and the first to be eradicated without using a vaccine or medicine.
Insecurity in Sudan is the biggest threat to achieving this historic goal. Since its inception, the international Guinea worm eradication campaign has faced and overcome many challenges. Sudan has made a lot of progress, but efforts need to be intensified and peace maintained.
The Carter Center founders’ visit comes on the heels of major Guinea worm successes in Nigeria –formerly the most Guinea worm-endemic country—and Niger; both countries interrupted disease transmission in late 2009, having recorded no cases of the disease for one year.
When The Carter Center began spearheading the international Guinea worm eradication campaign in 1986, approximately 3.5 million cases of the disease caused unimaginable suffering in 20 African and Asian countries.
Today, incidence of Guinea worm disease—also known as dracunculiasis—has been dramatically reduced to fewer than 3,500 cases located in only the most isolated and forgotten communities in southern Sudan, northern Ghana, eastern Mali, and western Ethiopia.
The Guinea Worm Eradication Program in Sudan is a unique example of the interrelated nature of peace and health issues. Sudan is experiencing a period critical to future stability as the country continues to implement the landmark 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which ended decades of civil war.
Historic national elections planned for April—the first of their kind involving both the northern and southern regions—will mean millions of people moving to polling stations across the country.
At the invitation of Sudanese authorities, The Carter Center launched its observation mission in February 2008 to assess Sudan’s entire electoral process, and President Carter plans to return to Sudan to observe elections in April.
Since 1989, President Carter has worked tirelessly to reduce human suffering in Sudan caused by conflict, malnutrition, and disease. In 1995, he secured the longest humanitarian cease-fire ever achieved in civil-war-torn Sudan to jump start Sudan’s campaign against Guinea worm disease, pilot the effort against river blindness, and provide an opportunity for children to be immunized against polio and other illnesses.
The cease-fire is commonly referred to as the “Guinea worm cease-fire.” Many of the disease prevention methods put in place during the unprecedented six months of relative stability were maintained by local communities, even after the recurrence of violence.
In a part of the world with very limited infrastructure, since 2005, the Southern Sudan Guinea worm program has served more than 22,000 villages through a complex surveillance and supervisory network.
Last year alone, this grassroots network trained 13,067 village volunteers, 138 field officers, and 45 technical supervisors to prevent and treat Guinea worm disease at the community level, many of whom risk their lives travelling long distances to bring health education and simple water filters to remote communities.
The incidence of Guinea worm disease has been reduced in Sudan from 118,578 cases in 1996 to [a provisional total of] 2,760 reported cases in 2009 - a 97 percent decrease. Since 2003, there have been no indigenous cases of Guinea worm disease in northern Sudan.
Eliminating Guinea worm disease throughout the country will strengthen health, agricultural productivity, and school attendance among Sudanese children, and leaves a legacy of trained, experienced health workers.
Editor's Note:
Additional Carter Center-assisted health work in Sudan: Based on lessons learned from the Guinea Worm Eradication Program,
The Carter Center has utilized similar grassroots mobilization to support prevention efforts for two devastating blinding diseases endemic to Sudan: river blindness, a parasitic infection the Center assists to control in the north of Sudan (including eliminating the disease from Abu Hamad focus on the River Nile), and trachoma; the south is believed to be one of the world's worst-affected regions for the preventable, bacterial infection.
Guinea worm disease is contracted when people ingest drinking water from stagnant sources containing microscopic, infective Guinea worm larvae. After a year of incubation, the female Guinea worm--which can grow up to 1 meter long--creates an agonizingly painful lesion on the skin and slowly emerges from the body over a period of several weeks.
The contamination cycle begins again when victims, seeking relief from the burning sensation caused by the emerging Guinea worm, immerse their limbs in sources of drinking water. The presence of Guinea worm disease in a community indicates abject poverty, including the absence of safe drinking water.
Children suffering from the disease are too incapacitated to attend school. Communities suffer food shortages during Guinea worm disease outbreaks when residents are too ill to farm.
Online Guinea worm resources: Up-to-date Guinea worm resources including, monthly case reporting, graphs,news articles, and human interest stories are available on the Center's site at www.cartercenter.org