A Devastating Blinding Disease Is Crippling Communities In Africa, But It’s Easy For The World To Ignore

Some 40 million people in the Congo are at risk.
|

This article is part of HuffPost’s Project Zero campaign, a yearlong series on neglected tropical diseases and efforts to fight them.

SALAMBONGO, Congo ― Jetou Mapuani had no idea why the skin on her legs was turning spotted or scaly, only that she could not sleep at night or stop scratching by day. She had no idea what the balloons of flesh popping from her middle, arms and legs meant, but when one started coming out of the top of her head, it felt like her skull was splitting.

Mapuani could only hide what was happening to her with clothes, including a headscarf to cover an eventual avocado-sized growth, and try to carry on looking after the home and farm she shared with her husband in a remote village in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Mapuani didn’t know it yet, but she had contracted a debilitating disease known as river blindness, which is rampant in Congo but can be difficult to treat effectively here. As she struggled to come to terms with her mysterious deformities and deteriorating eyesight, her husband declared her an unfit wife and their marriage over.

“He said, ‘Like this, you are useless. Go home,’” recalled Mapuani, who is unsure of her age but thinks she is in her 60s.

“He threw me away like I was a dead person,” she said. 

Open Image Modal
Jetou Mapuani sits in her tiny, one-person hut.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Dr. Naomi Awaca, director of programs against river blindness at the Ministry of Health in Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, has studied the disease since 2005 and knows how it destroys relationships.

“There are no shortage of social problems caused because a partner will no longer accept someone who has gone blind,” she said. “The people who become blind are no longer useful for their community and become a burden for the family.”

“There are also cultural aspects to the abandonments, despite awareness campaigns about the disease,” she added. “Like people will say that witchcraft is involved, or the blind person is a witch and must be thrown out.”

Divorced and destitute, Mapuani had no choice but to leave her husband’s home, as he swiftly moved another woman in. 

“When he noticed that something was wrong with me, he went and married another woman,” she said. 

Open Image Modal
People waiting at a rural clinic in Congo, where river blindness is rampant.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

In this area of the Congolese bush, people call what Mapuani was suffering from “suka ya nzela,” meaning “end of the road.” In the medical world, it is called river blindness, or onchocerciasis. The disease is caused by parasites injected by black flies that live near fast-flowing water. About 18 million people around the world have river blindness, according to the World Health Organization, and more than 99 percent of cases are found in Africa. In Congo, 40 million people ― about half the country’s population ― are at risk. 

Although river blindness is not fatal, its symptoms strip people of so much vitality that many, like Mapuani, are left hoping and waiting to die. 

“I ask God when he will take my soul,” she said. “My heart hurts from having no hope.”

Mapuani’s life has been reduced to sitting inside a stick hut thatched with banana leaves. For the past six years, she has barely left this ramshackle shelter ― which contains only a single bed and the bare essentials ― except to go to the outhouse, a painstaking process that involves feeling her way along the house and up a hill with a stick to an outside toilet.  

Open Image Modal
Mapuani, who lost her vision to river blindness, feels her way to the outhouse.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Early signs of river blindness involve extreme itchiness. For some people, this feeling can be so intense that they experience chronic insomnia, or they try to scratch off their skin using flame-heated knives or machetes. In extreme cases, the itching drives people to suicide. 

The injected larvae become worms that live in the human body for years and reproduce thousands of times per day. The worms usually hide themselves in the body until they cluster together in nodules that stick out of the skin. Other visible signs involve skin depigmentation on the legs ― called “leopard skin,” due to white spots that appear ― and scaly patches known as “lizard skin.”

Open Image Modal
Leopard skin, one of the symptoms of river blindness.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Over time, the disease may affect the eyes, causing loss of vision or irreversible blindness. 

When Mapuani describes her loss of sight, she makes a noise that sounds like a gust of wind extinguishing a candle ― “shoo” ― and drops her hands down past her face for emphasis.

Cast from her husband’s home, Mapuani now lives in a tiny, desperately poor village called Salambongo, which means “make money.” She survives on handouts from neighbors and the church. But in a place where so many people have become helpless due to this ravaging disease, the able are overstretched.  

“There are days when I eat nothing. I just drink water from morning to evening and go to bed hungry,” she said, holding a pack of donated biscuits tight against her side.

Of the 18 women who gathered to listen as Mapuani told her story to this reporter, half showed river blindness symptoms. Some had nodules that ranged from the size of a pingpong ball to a baseball.

Beyond sleepy Salambongo, home to 1,000 people, are countless Congolese villages facing the same crisis.

“This really is a big public health problem in DRC,” said Awaca, who stresses the huge setback diseases like river blindness have on the working community in a country trying to pull itself out of so much poverty and conflict.

In Salambongo, there are so many black flies, which locals call “pipi,” that people can’t and don’t swat them all away as they spend their days farming, hunting and fishing ― or even during interviews.  

The nearest city of Kisangani is more than a four-hour drive in a 4x4 down heavily potholed roads. But even there, people would not find the medicine to treat this disease, and they would first have to manage to get properly diagnosed in a country where health care services and education are lacking.

Open Image Modal
The village of Salambongo, population 1,000, has many of the black flies that can cause river blindness.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Ivermectin, the drug used to treat river blindness, is not found in shops. A drug manufacturer donates it to the Congo, where a network of volunteers, the ministry of health, and charities distribute it to communities vulnerable to river blindness. Ivermectin is distributed with caution because it can be dangerous, even deadly, for people to take if they’re also infected with eye worm, another parasitic disease found in some rainforest areas in Central and West Africa.

In Congo, mass distributions of ivermectin started in 2003 but were put on hold for a few years in some areas and halted in others after some deaths caused widespread rumors and mistrust that still persist today.

For the vast majority of river blindness patients, however, ivermectin is a safe and effective medication that prevents blindness and reduces transmission of the disease. It has been taken successfully by tens of millions of people in Africa and Latin America and helped Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and Guatemala eliminate river blindness within their borders. The drug is also used to treat many other diseases caused by roundworm parasites. In fact, ivermectin’s inventors, Irish scientist William Campbell and Japanese scientist Satoshi Omura, won a Nobel Prize in 2015 for this compound. 

Open Image Modal
Kids in the village of Salambongo.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

“The people who take ivermectin every year, they really feel a benefit, because it prevents blindness, they have less itching,” said Belén Pedrique, who works for the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative, a nonprofit that aims to improve treatment for river blindness and other diseases around the world, including in Congo. 

“But many people are complaining that after six months, they get the itching,” Pedrique added.

This is because the drug kills off only the baby worms, called microfilariae. It doesn’t kill the adult worms, and it doesn’t totally stop females from producing new microfilariae, though it does reduce their production for a few months. It’s the microfilariae, not the adults, that are actually responsible for the worst damage from the disease ― the itching, the disfigurement and the blindness. So the drug must be taken at least once a year for 15-17 years, until the mature worms die off on their own.

However, unlike other countries in the region or in Latin America, Congo lacks the funds to deliver mass treatments on a yearly basis. At two-thirds the size of western Europe, this nation has few reliable roads and is veined by plenty of swift rivers, where black flies breed.

Open Image Modal
A Congolese doctor examines a nodule full of worms on a boy's head.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Awaca estimates that mass drug distributions reach around 80 percent of the affected areas in Congo, and 30 million people receive treatment with ivermectin. But community volunteers who go door to door offering the deworming drug say many people refuse to take it. 

“When we see the figures it’s about 60 percent who refuse, categorically, to take it,” said volunteer Angel Mozenge, who lives in the village of Uma, about an hour’s drive from Salambongo, and has distributed ivermectin since 2009.

“Some people think that if they take the medicines, they’ll die or get nodules,” said Jean Basingi, another local volunteer.

Mapuani, like many others in her village, hasn’t taken the drug, which could help reduce the worms in her body but would not be able to bring back her sight.

Down at the main river clearing in Salambongo, the black flies swarm around Regine Bora as she washes her clothes. She finds them a nuisance but doesn’t associate them with river blindness. She blames that on ivermectin.

“I don’t take these pills because they give you the vimba vimba,” she said, using the local word for nodules.

Open Image Modal
Regine Bora washes clothes by the river while black flies buzz around her.
Neil Brandvold/DNDi

Health workers who have watched this disease cripple communities for decades are now hoping new medications will arrive on the scene.

“It would be helpful to have more effective drugs, because maybe we could cut the number of years, if we had a drug that was more effective with the adult worms, or if we can keep the microfilariae away for longer we would need less rounds and retain the patient for less time,” Pedrique said.

DNDi is working with pharmaceutical giant Bayer to develop a drug used to deworm animals to see if it could kill adult worms in people infected by river blindness. 

It will do little to help people like Mapuani, but could prevent half of the women around her ― who have either missed or ignored the ivermectin rounds ― from being plunged into the same darkness and despair.

“Sometimes I cry all night,” Mapuani said. “Sometimes from suffering, sometimes from hunger and sometimes from poverty.”

Language has been changed to more accurately reflect the manufacture of ivermectin and its distribution in the Congo.

DNDi is a recipient of grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which also funds HuffPost’s Project Zero series. All content in this series is editorially independent, with no influence or input from the foundation.

If you’d like to contribute a post to the series, send an email to ProjectZero@huffingtonpost.com. And follow the conversation on social media by using the hashtag #ProjectZero.

Support HuffPost

At HuffPost, we believe that everyone needs high-quality journalism, but we understand that not everyone can afford to pay for expensive news subscriptions. That is why we are committed to providing deeply reported, carefully fact-checked news that is freely accessible to everyone.

Whether you come to HuffPost for updates on the 2024 presidential race, hard-hitting investigations into critical issues facing our country today, or trending stories that make you laugh, we appreciate you. The truth is, news costs money to produce, and we are proud that we have never put our stories behind an expensive paywall.

Would you join us to help keep our stories free for all? Your will go a long way.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Neglected Tropical Diseases
Lymphatic Filariasis(01 of18)
Open Image Modal
Lymphatic filariasis, more commonly known as elephantiasis, is a leading cause of disability worldwide, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It affects over 120 million people globally and can cause severe swelling of body parts, including the legs and scrotum. While people are usually infected in childhood, the painful, disfiguring symptoms of the disease only show up later in life. (credit:Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative)
Onchocerciasis(02 of18)
Open Image Modal
Onchocerciasis, commonly known as river blindness, is an eye and skin disease that can cause severe itching and visual impairment ― including blindness. Around 18 million people are infected. Of those, over 6.5 million suffer from severe itching, and 270,000 are blind. The disease is caused by a parasitic worm, transmitted through bites from infected blackflies. The worm can live for up to 14 years in the human body, and each adult female worm can be more than 1.5 feet long. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)
Chagas(03 of18)
Open Image Modal
Chagas disease is a potentially life-threatening illness. In the first months after infection, symptoms are mild, including skin lesions and fever. But in its second, chronic phase, up to 1 in 3 patients develop cardiac disorders, which can lead to heart failure and sudden death. The disease is transmitted to humans by “kissing bugs,” which live in the walls or roof cracks of poorly constructed homes in rural areas, according to the World Health Organization. Of the estimated 6 million to 7 million people affected worldwide, most live in Latin America, but the disease has also spread to the United States. Around 300,000 people in the U.S. have Chagas disease, according to the Dallas Morning News. (credit:Nature Picture Library/Getty Images)
Dengue(04 of18)
Open Image Modal
Dengue is a flu-like illness that can sometimes be lethal. In 2015, more than 2 million cases of dengue were reported in the Americas. In some Asian and Latin American countries, “severe” dengue is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children. Dengue is spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the same type of insect that transmits Zika. To reduce the risk of bites, WHO recommends covering water containers, using insecticide, having window screens and wearing long sleeves. (credit:Fachrul Reza/NurPhoto/Getty Images)
Human African Trypanosomiasis(05 of18)
Open Image Modal
Human African trypanosomiasis, commonly known as sleeping sickness, is a chronic infection that affects the central nervous system. People can be infected for years without signs, but in the second stage, patients can suffer behavior changes, hallucinations and even slip into a coma and die. Many people affected live in remote, rural areas that don’t have easy access to quality health services. This makes diagnosis and treatment more difficult. WHO has identified sleeping sickness as a disease that could be eliminated worldwide by 2020 if the right resources are dedicated to it. (credit:MARIZILDA CRUPPE / DNDi)
Leishmaniasis(06 of18)
Open Image Modal
There are several forms of leishmaniasis, including visceral, which can be fatal, with symptoms including fever and weight loss; and cutaneous, the most common form, which causes skin lesions, leaving lifelong scars and disability. The disease, spread by sandflies, affects some of the poorest people on earth, according to WHO, and is associated with malnutrition and poor housing. Around 1 million new cases occur annually, causing 20,000 to 30,000 deaths. Leishmaniasis is climate-sensitive, affected by changes in rainfall, temperature and humidity ― which means it could be exacerbated by global warming. (credit:Corbis Documentary/Getty Images)
Trachoma(07 of18)
Open Image Modal
Trachoma is an eye disease, which if untreated, can cause irreversible blindness. It causes visual impairment or blindness in 1.9 million people, per WHO. The disease is present in poor, rural areas of 42 countries in Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East ― but Africa is the most affected. (credit:STR via Getty Images)
Rabies(08 of18)
Open Image Modal
Rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms show up. Initial symptoms are fever and tingling around the wound. As the virus spreads, people with “furious” rabies become hyperactive and die by cardiac arrest; people with “paralytic” rabies become paralyzed, fall into a coma and die. Transmitted by pet dogs, rabies causes tens of thousands of deaths every year. The disease is present on all continents except Antarctica ― but more than 95 percent of human deaths due to it occur in Asia and Africa. It is a neglected disease primarily affecting poor populations, where vaccines are not readily available. (credit:NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
Leprosy(09 of18)
Open Image Modal
Leprosy is a chronic disease, which when untreated can cause permanent damage to the skin, nerves, limbs and eyes. There were 176,176 cases at the end of 2015, according to WHO. While the stigma associated with the disease means people are less likely to seek treatment, leprosy is curable, and treatment early on can avoid disability. Leprosy was eliminated as a public health problem in 2000 ― meaning there is now less than one case for every 10,000 people worldwide. (credit:Chandan Khanna/AFP/Getty Images)
Schistosomiasis(10 of18)
Open Image Modal
Schistosomiasis is a chronic disease that causes gradual damage to internal organs. Symptoms include blood in urine, and in severe cases, kidney or liver failure, and even bladder cancer. Around 20,000 people die from it each year. Transmitted by parasites in infested water, the disease largely affects poor, rural communities in Africa that lack access to safe drinking water and sanitation. “[People] get it as kids bathing in water,” Sandrine Martin, a staff member for the nonprofit Malaria Consortium in Mozambique, told HuffPost. “But the symptoms, like blood in the urine, only develop later ― and then people tend to hide it because it’s in the genital area.” (credit:Malaria Consortium)
Chikungunya(11 of18)
Open Image Modal
Chikungunya is a disease that causes fever and severe joint pain, according to WHO. While it is rarely fatal, it can be debilitating. Since 2004, it has infected more than 2 million people in Asia and Africa. There is no cure for the disease, which is transmitted to humans by infected mosquitoes. The name comes from a word in the Kimakonde language, spoken in some areas of Mozambique and Tanzania, that means “to become contorted” ― a nod to the hunched-over position of people who are affected with joint pain. (credit:Universal Images Group/Getty Images)
Echinoccosis(12 of18)
Open Image Modal
Echinoccosis is a parasitic disease that leads to cysts in the liver and lungs. While it can be life-threatening if untreated, even people who receive treatment often have a reduced quality of life, according to WHO. Found in every continent except Antarctica, the disease is acquired by consuming food or water contaminated with tapeworm eggs, or through direct contact with animals who carry it, such as domestic dogs or sheep. (credit:Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)
Foodborne Trematodiases(13 of18)
Open Image Modal
Foodborne trematodiases can cause severe liver and lung disease, and on rare occasions death. Most prevalent in East Asia and South America, the disease is caused by worms that people get by eating raw fish, shellfish or vegetables that have been infected with larvae. While early, light infections can be asymptomatic, chronic infections are severe.More than 56 million people were infected with foodborne trematodes, and over 7,000 people died in 2005, the year of WHO’s most recent global estimate. (credit:Alexandre Tremblot de La Croix via Getty Images)
Buruli Ulcer(14 of18)
Open Image Modal
Buruli ulcer is a skin infection caused by bacteria that often starts as a painless swelling, but without treatment, it can lead to permanent disfigurement and disability. In 2014, 2,200 new cases were reported, with most patients under age 15. The exact mode of transmission is still unknown. The majority of cases, if detected early enough, can be cured with antibiotics. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)
Yaws(15 of18)
Open Image Modal
Yaws is a chronic, disfiguring childhood infectious disease. Affecting skin, bone and cartilage, the symptoms show up weeks to months after infection and include yellow lesions and bone swelling. More than 250,000 cases of yaws were reported from 2010 to 2013, WHO told HuffPost. A lack of clean water and soap for bathing contributes to its spread. Only 13 countries are known to still have cases of yaws, including Ghana, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands. (credit:BIOPHOTO ASSOCIATES via Getty Images)
Soil-Transmitted Helminth(16 of18)
Open Image Modal
Soil-transmitted helminth infections are among the most common infections worldwide and affect the poorest communities. People are infected by worms transmitted by human feces contaminating soil in areas with poor sanitation. People with light infections usually have no symptoms. Heavier infections can cause diarrhea, abdominal pain, general weakness and impaired cognitive development. Depending on the number of worms, it can lead to death. Up to 2 billion people are infected worldwide, according to WHO. But because infections can be light, not all patients suffer, WHO’s Ashok Moo told HuffPost. (credit:Malaria Consortium)
Taeniasis(17 of18)
Open Image Modal
Taeniasis is an intestinal infection caused by tapeworms, which mostly causes mild symptoms, such as abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea or constipation. But if larvae infect the brain, causing neurocysticercosis, the disease can cause epileptic seizures and can be fatal. People get it by eating raw or undercooked infected pork. The ingested tapeworm eggs develop into larvae and migrate through the body. Taeniasis is underreported worldwide because it is hard to diagnose in areas with little access to health services, according to the CDC. (credit:Science Source/Getty Images)
Guinea Worm(18 of18)
Open Image Modal
Guinea worm is a crippling disease that it is close to being eradicated. There were only 22 human cases reported in 2015, according to WHO ― down from around 3.5 million cases in 21 countries in the mid-1980s. The disease is usually transmitted when people with limited access to quality drinking water swallow stagnant water contaminated with parasites. About a year after infection, a painful blister forms ― most of the time on the lower leg ― and one or more worms emerge, along with a burning sensation. It is rarely fatal, but can debilitate infected people for weeks. The Carter Center, founded by former President Jimmy Carter and his wife, has been instrumental in efforts to eradicate the disease. (credit:PETER MARTELL/AFP/Getty Images)