Schistosomiasis japonicum in Indonesia: Progress and Surveillance Needs in Verge-of-Elimination Settings

印度尼西亚日本血吸虫病:在即将消除阶段的进展和监测需求

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Abstract

Schistosomiasis japonicum transmission in Indonesia has declined substantially over recent decades, placing it in the last miles of elimination in the Western Pacific Region. As programmes transition from control to interruption of transmission, surveillance systems must be capable of detecting residual transmission. This study synthesised routine epidemiological data from 2015 to 2025 to assess Indonesia's readiness for elimination and to identify key surveillance gaps in near-elimination settings. Descriptive quantitative analysis was conducted using national surveillance data from two endemic districts in Central Sulawesi, complemented by programme reports on mass drug administration, human diagnosis, animal reservoir surveillance, and snail surveys. Results showed that while prevalence in humans has remained low and responsive to mass drug administration, transmission persists through infected animal reservoirs and intermediate snail hosts. Surveillance performance is constrained by limited diagnostic capacity, inconsistent snail survey coverage, fragmented paper-based reporting systems, and weak integration across human, animal, and environmental sectors. These findings indicated that low prevalence in humans alone is insufficient to demonstrate interruption of transmission, particularly in zoonotic schistosomiasis. In conclusion, Indonesia's experience highlights the need to strengthen near-elimination surveillance through sensitive diagnostics, integrated One Health approaches, and digitally enabled data systems to sustain elimination and support future verification of schistosomiasis transmission interruption.

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