60 landmarks to call attention to this year’s World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day 

60 landmarks across 40 cities and 24 countries to call attention to this year’s World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day

  • Medical experts fear resources for other diseases are being neglected during the Covid-19 pandemic
  • Neglected diseases including leprosy, scabies and river blindness are causing suffering around the world 
  • Egypt’s Pyramids of Giza, Italy’s Tower of Pisa and Brazil’s Christ the Redeemer are among landmarks lit up

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Medical experts have warned resources are being sucked away from the fight against a host of debilitating diseases that affect 1.7 billion of the poorest people on the planet.

Charities marked World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day on Saturday, seeking to draw attention to a diverse group of communicable diseases still causing suffering around the world.

They include leprosy, Chagas disease, intestinal worms, dengue and chikungunya, Guinea worm disease, scabies, trachoma and schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis or elephantiasis, yaws, river blindness and sleeping sickness.

Egypt’s Pyramids and Sphinx were lit up to mark the day. Charities marked World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day on Saturday, seeking to draw attention to a diverse group of communicable diseases still causing suffering around the world

The Burj Al Arab in Dubai is seen lit up. Medical experts have warned resources are being sucked away from the fight against a host of debilitating diseases that affect 1.7 billion of the poorest people on the planet

The Burj Al Arab in Dubai is seen lit up. Medical experts have warned resources are being sucked away from the fight against a host of debilitating diseases that affect 1.7 billion of the poorest people on the planet

Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil is seen above lit up. Countries have had to suspend mass treatment interventions and active-case finding and delay diagnosis and treatment for some diseases amid the pandemic

Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil is seen above lit up. Countries have had to suspend mass treatment interventions and active-case finding and delay diagnosis and treatment for some diseases amid the pandemic

The World Health Organisation released its second 10-year-plan on January 28 with the aim of eliminating at least one of the 20 recognized NTDs in at least 90 countries by 2030.

It also aims to make drugs safe and available and target the mosquitoes, flies and ticks that spread some NTDs, with a view to cutting the number of people requiring medical treatment for the diseases by 90% over the next 10 years. 

The WHO said in September the outbreak had hit NTD programmes.

Countries have had to suspend mass treatment interventions and active-case finding and delay diagnosis and treatment.

Critical personnel have been reassigned to deal with COVID-19 and the manufacture, shipment and delivery of medicines has been disrupted, it said, warning of ‘an increased burden of NTDs’.

The KL Tower in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is seen above. The World Health Organisation released its second 10-year-plan on January 28 with the aim of eliminating at least one of the 20 recognized NTDs in at least 90 countries by 2030

The KL Tower in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is seen above. The World Health Organisation released its second 10-year-plan on January 28 with the aim of eliminating at least one of the 20 recognized NTDs in at least 90 countries by 2030

Critical personnel have been reassigned to deal with COVID-19 and the manufacture, shipment and delivery of medicines has been disrupted. The SkyView Ferris Wheel, Centennial Park in Atlanta, Georgia is seen above

Critical personnel have been reassigned to deal with COVID-19 and the manufacture, shipment and delivery of medicines has been disrupted. The SkyView Ferris Wheel, Centennial Park in Atlanta, Georgia is seen above