| Literature DB >> 27258124 |
Godfrey Bwire1, Maurice Mwesawina2, Yosia Baluku3, Setiala S E Kanyanda2, Christopher Garimoi Orach4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cross-border cholera outbreaks are a major public health problem in Sub-Saharan Africa contributing to the high annual reported cholera cases and deaths. These outbreaks affect all categories of people and are challenging to prevent and control. This article describes lessons learnt during the cross-border cholera outbreak control in Eastern and Southern Africa sub-regions using the case of Uganda-DRC and Malawi-Mozambique borders and makes recommendations for future outbreak prevention and control.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27258124 PMCID: PMC4892562 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The map of Africa showing the location of Uganda and Malawi and the neighboring countries on the study borders.
Fig 2The map of Malawi (2a) and Uganda (2b) showing the location of the cholera affected districts and the distribution of the cholera cases in the study area.
Fig 3Reported cross-border cholera cases in Malawi and Uganda in 2015.
Fig 4The distribution of cholera cases by country of origin and sex.
Fig 5The age distribution of cross-border cholera cases reported in Malawi and Uganda cholera treatment centres in 2015.
Laboratory results of the cross-border cholera cases seen in Uganda and Malawi in 2015.
| Country | Total stool samples tested | Number of positive stool samples | Type of organism isolated | Positivity rate | Antibiotic sensitivity pattern |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uganda | 74 | 60 | Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor Inaba | 81% | The organisms were sensitive to Tetracycline and Ciprofloxacin antibiotics but resistant to Ampicillin, Chloramphenicol, Cotrimoxazole and Nalidixic acid |
| Malawi | 72 | 55 | Vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor Ogawa | 76% | The organisms were sensitive to Doxycycline (Tetracycline), Nalidixic acid, Ciprofloxacin and Erythromycin antibiotics. |
Risk factors for the cross-border cholera outbreaks, interventions implemented and challenges experienced during response in Uganda and Malawi, 2015.
| Country | Risk factors for cholera outbreak | Cholera control Interventions implemented | Challenges experienced during implementation of cholera response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Use of contaminated river water mainly from | Chlorination of water for household use especially for drinking and food preparation. Promotion of eating of hot foods, safe food preparation and boiling of drinking water. Sanitation, safe water chain and hygiene promotion. Inspection and enforcement of hygiene in the community and in the public places (schools, markets, hotels, etc). Health education on cholera prevention and treatment. Disease surveillance with emphasis on early detection and reporting of suspected cases and deaths. Treatment of the sick in the Cholera treatment centres and in Oral rehydration centres. Medical supervision of the suspected cholera burials to limit community contact with the corpse. Restriction of feasting and promotion of infection control through hand washing, disinfection, good sanitation and hygiene practices. | The outbreak was protracted for over 3 months which disrupted other routine services by withdrawing resources (human, logistics and infrastructure). Lack of information sharing between the two neighboring countries (Uganda and DRC). Inadequate risk factor assessment since some patients originated across the border in DRC where the Ugandan health workers could not easily access. Poor communication between the patients and the health workers due to language barrier; the official communication language for the health workers in Uganda was English while that in DRC was French. Lack of collaboration between the two sister governments (cholera actors) in implementation of the cholera response. Rampant movement of the patients and communities across the border which complicated the follow up for risk assessment and exacerbated the spread of the infection. Lack of accurate population data for response planning especially for quantification of supplies for water chlorination, and hygiene. During the 18th and 24th calendar weeks, the outbreak along Uganda-DRC border spread to two different localities in the interior within the same border district leading to 102 cholera cases with no deaths. These outbreaks in the interior were quickly detected and controlled within two weeks of confirmation for each affected location. | |
| Floods leading to contamination of the water sources. Poor sanitation and hygiene. Use of contaminated water sources. Migration across the Malawi-Mozambique border and vise-versa. | Similar interventions as those implemented in Uganda plus use the of OCV to complement the WASH interventions. A total of 160,000 doses of OCV were imported for vaccination campaign and used for cholera control in Malawi. | Similar challenges as those documented in Uganda were noted in Malawi except the following: the border was Malawi-Mozambique and the official language of communication for the health workers in Mozambique (replacement for DRC) was Portuguese not French. Implementation of OCV required accurate data which was not available since the population in Mozambique which also benefited could not be accurately estimated. The recommended vaccine dose for OCV by WHO is two doses given 14 days apart. However, some clients mainly those from Mozambique received only one dose and could not be located to receive the second dose. The outbreak later spread to other districts in Malawi namely; Blantyre and Ntcheu leading to 60 cases and 3 deaths with high CFR of 5%. |