| Literature DB >> 17411421 |
Abstract
Conflict and war have long been recognized as determinants of infectious disease risk. Re-emergence of epidemic sleeping sickness in sub-Saharan Africa since the 1970s has coincided with extensive civil conflict in affected regions. Sleeping sickness incidence has placed increasing pressure on the health resources of countries already burdened by malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis. In areas of Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Angola, sleeping sickness occurs in epidemic proportions, and is the first or second greatest cause of mortality in some areas, ahead of HIV/AIDS. In Uganda, there is evidence of increasing spread and establishment of new foci in central districts. Conflict is an important determinant of sleeping sickness outbreaks, and has contributed to disease resurgence. This paper presents a review and characterization of the processes by which conflict has contributed to the occurrence of sleeping sickness in Africa. Conflict contributes to disease risk by affecting the transmission potential of sleeping sickness via economic impacts, degradation of health systems and services, internal displacement of populations, regional insecurity, and reduced access for humanitarian support. Particular focus is given to the case of sleeping sickness in south-eastern Uganda, where incidence increase is expected to continue. Disease intervention is constrained in regions with high insecurity; in these areas, political stabilization, localized deployment of health resources, increased administrative integration and national capacity are required to mitigate incidence. Conflict-related variables should be explicitly integrated into risk mapping and prioritization of targeted sleeping sickness research and mitigation initiatives.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17411421 PMCID: PMC1851948 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1505-1-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Figure 1Distribution of sleeping sickness in Africa and map of Uganda showing the case study area. The approximate location of the 'Luwero Triangle' is shown; this is where much of the conflict and violence was concentrated during Uganda's civil war (1979–86). Sleeping sickness status data from WHO (2001).
Figure 2Sleeping sickness epidemics and major political events in Uganda, 1905–2000. Cases from 1936 onwards include south-eastern Uganda only. Sources: Sleeping sickness data 1905–36 deaths [62], 1925–36 cases [62], 1937–58 cases [63], 1960–71 cases (Unpublished report, 1992, Mbulamberi, D. B. The sleeping sickness situation in Uganda: past and present. National Sleeping Sickness Control Program, Jinja, Uganda), 1972–75 cases [54], and 1976–2001 cases (Ministry of Health, Uganda); Political time-series [56, 64, 65].
Impacts of social conflict on sleeping sickness in sub-Saharan Africa
| • Reliance of governments on external funding for control resources and donor reluctance due to political insecurity | Reduction in provision of public health services | ↑ 1/ |
| • Reduced reliability of economy for international investment and aid | ||
| • Collapse of businesses and local economies. Loss of employment, income &provision of products & services | Decreased treatment and control of animal infection and transmission | ↑ 1/ |
| • Abandonment or appropriation of land; changes in land ownership and land use. Possible increased vector habitat | ||
| • Loss of educated and business elite in cases of emigration, exile, or purging; decreased overall response capacity and economic stability | Decreased vector control | ↑ 1/ |
| • Absence of public health funding due to economic collapse, corruption, or re-allocation of funds to security or military expenses | Reduction in provision of public health services | ↑ 1/ |
| • Collapse or decline in training programs for public health, veterinary, and vector control workers; decline in personnel and expertise; limited surge capacity for outbreak response | Decreased treatment and control of animal infection and transmission | ↑ 1/ |
| • Total absence of case surveillance or reporting in some rebel-controlled areas or high-conflict zones; limited screening/treatment | ||
| • Demotivation of health care, veterinary and vector control personnel caused by insecurity, inflation, or no pay | Decreased vector control | ↑ 1/ |
| • Collapse of vector control and veterinary health programs | ||
| • Increased mortality and morbidity due to conflict violence | Increased exposure of people and cattle to tsetse habitat | ↑ |
| • Transport of people and animal hosts, vectors, and parasites into potentially naïve or uninfected populations | ||
| • Loss of livelihoods – increased stress, reduced household resources, reduced health &nutritional status | Increased vector habitat | ↑ |
| • Decreased access to health facilities; decreased population health | Increased mortality | - |
| • Separation of household units | ||
| • Abandonment of land; vegetation re-growth; increased vector habitat | ||
| •Treatment facilities prone to looting and insurgent attacks | Reduction in provision of public health services | ↑ 1/ |
| • Insecurity in affected regions constrains or prevents control and implementation logistics; access of mobile teams limited | Increased mortality | - |
| • Lack of integration and continuity in primary care where a range of NGOs are the dominant providers of health and intervention services. | ||
| • Patients delay seeking medical help due to travel insecurity or unavailable transport; higher proportion of late-stage or unreported and untreated cases. | ||