%0 Journal Article %T The importance of patient compliance in repeated rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) for the elimination of intestinal helminth transmission %A James E. Truscott %A Roy M. Anderson %A Sam H. Farrell %J Archive of "Parasites & Vectors". %D 2017 %R 10.1186/s13071-017-2206-5 %X Systematic non-compliance to chemotherapeutic treatment among a portion of the eligible population is thought to be a major obstacle to the elimination of helminth infections by mass drug administration (MDA). MDA for helminths is repeated at defined intervals such as yearly or every 2 years, as a consequence of the inability of the human host to develop fully protective immunity to reinfection. As such, how an individual complies to these repeated rounds of MDA can have a significant impact on parasite transmission. The importance of this factor is poorly understood at present. Few epidemiological studies have examined longitudinal trends in compliance in the many communities in areas of endemic helminth infection that are undergoing MDA. Reducing systematic non-compliance will obviously increase the number of individuals treated, but it may also alter the dynamics of parasite transmission %K Soil-transmitted Helminths %K Schistosomiasis %K Mass Drug Administration %K Compliance %K Systematic non-compliance %K Mathematical modelling %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5469187/