Since the inception of (the Global Elimination of Blinding Trachoma) GET 2020 in 1997 and the implementation of the SAFE strategy a year later, much progress has been made toward lowering the prevalence of trachoma worldwide with elimination of the disease in some countries. However, high recurrence of trichiasis after surgery, difficulty in controlling the reemergence of infection after mass distribution of azithromycin in some communities, the incomplete understanding of environment in relation to the disease, and the difficulty in establishing the prevalence of the disease in low endemic areas are some of the issues still facing completion of the GET 2020 goals. In this narrative review, literature was searched from 1998 to January 2013 in PubMed for original studies and reviews. Reasons for these ongoing problems are discussed, and several suggestions are made as avenues for exploration in relation to improving the SAFE strategy with emphasis on improving surgical quality and management of the mass treatment with antibiotics. In addition, more research needs to be done to better understand the approach to improve sanitation, hygiene, and environment. The main conclusion of this review is that scale-up is needed for all SAFE components, and more research should be generated from communities outside of Africa and Asia.
Nonabusive adults who were physically abused as children differ from abusive adults who were abused as children in several significant ways. It is recommended that abused children receive intensive therapy either at the time that the abuse is discovered or at a developmentally more appropriate stage to block persistence of symptoms into adulthood. For both the abused child and the adult a highly interactive course of therapy is recommended, during which the major goal is reparenting.Those who were physically abused as children and who have grown up to become nonabusive adults have been virtually ignored by the mental health profession. This is in sharp contrast to the intensive study and therapy that abusive adults, parents in particular, who were physically abused as children have received.
The presence of two markers on chromosome 9, both a balanced reciprocal translocation and an inversion, allows morphologic demonstration of recombination between the normal and rearranged homologues. In the family under discussion 50% of the progeny studied (two of four) received a translocated 9 without the inversion from a parent with a translocated and inverted 9, indicating crossing-over between members of the chromosome 9 pair. Thus the morphology of the chromosomes allows a recombinant event which is normally invisible to be seen cytologically. Theoretically after crossing-over the balanced reciprocal translocation heterozygote results from adjacent-1 segregation and unbalanced derivative chromosome combinations from alternate segregation. Therefore it cannot be assumed that the balanced progeny necessarily result from alternate segregation and the unbalanced from adjacent-1. The prenatal diagnostic studies presented in this report also show that chromosome analysis of other family members is required when the recombination between homologues produces differences in chromosome morphology between parent and fetus.
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