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Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases Commons

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Selected Works

Daniel T. Engelman MD

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases

The Global Burden Of Scabies: A Cross-Sectional Analysis From The Global Burden Of Disease Study 2015., Chante Karimkhani, Danny V Colombara, Aaron M Drucker, Scott A Norton, Roderick Hay, Daniel Engelman, Andrew Steer, Margot Whitfeld, Mohsen Naghavi, Robert P Dellavalle Jun 2019

The Global Burden Of Scabies: A Cross-Sectional Analysis From The Global Burden Of Disease Study 2015., Chante Karimkhani, Danny V Colombara, Aaron M Drucker, Scott A Norton, Roderick Hay, Daniel Engelman, Andrew Steer, Margot Whitfeld, Mohsen Naghavi, Robert P Dellavalle

Daniel T. Engelman MD

Background

Numerous population-based studies have documented high prevalence of scabies in overcrowded settings, particularly among children and in tropical regions. We provide an estimate of the global burden of scabies using data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2015.

Methods

We identified scabies epidemiological data sources from an extensive literature search and hospital insurance data and analysed data sources with a Bayesian meta-regression modelling tool, DisMod-MR 2·1, to yield prevalence estimates. We combined prevalence estimates with a disability weight, measuring disfigurement, itch, and pain caused by scabies, to produce years lived with disability (YLDs). With an assumed zero …


Toward The Global Control Of Human Scabies: Introducing The International Alliance For The Control Of Scabies, Daniel Engelman, Karen Kiang, Olivier Chosidow, James Mccarthy, Claire Fuller, Patrick Lammie, Roderick Hay, Andrew Steer Mar 2017

Toward The Global Control Of Human Scabies: Introducing The International Alliance For The Control Of Scabies, Daniel Engelman, Karen Kiang, Olivier Chosidow, James Mccarthy, Claire Fuller, Patrick Lammie, Roderick Hay, Andrew Steer

Daniel T. Engelman MD

Scabies, the human skin disease caused by infestation by the mite Sarcoptes scabiei var. hominis, causes considerable morbidity and mortality through direct effects and as a result of secondary bacterial infection. Scabies is a truly neglected disease, largely absent from the global health agenda, and its huge burden of disease is largely underappreciated. We contend that coordinated, global efforts to control this ubiquitous pathogenic mite are both important and achievable.