| Literature DB >> 27268508 |
Kim A Lindblade, Tolbert Nyenswah, Sakoba Keita, Boubakar Diallo, Francis Kateh, Aurora Amoah, Thomas K Nagbe, Pratima Raghunathan, John C Neatherlin, Mike Kinzer, Satish K Pillai, Kathleen R Attfield, Rana Hajjeh, Emmanuel Dweh, John Painter, Danielle T Barradas, Seymour G Williams, David J Blackley, Hannah L Kirking, Monita R Patel, Monica Dea, Mehran S Massoudi, Albert E Barskey, Shauna L Mettee Zarecki, Moses Fomba, Steven Grube, Lisa Belcher, Laura N Broyles, T Nikki Maxwell, Jose E Hagan, Kristin Yeoman, Matthew Westercamp, Joshua Mott, Frank Mahoney, Laurence Slutsker, Kevin M DeCock, Barbara Marston, Benjamin Dahl.
Abstract
Persons who died of Ebola virus disease at home in rural communities in Liberia and Guinea resulted in more secondary infections than persons admitted to Ebola treatment units. Intensified monitoring of contacts of persons who died of this disease in the community is an evidence-based approach to reduce virus transmission in rural communities.Entities:
Keywords: Ebola virus; Ebola virus disease; Guinea; Liberia; disease outbreaks; hemorrhagic fever; hospitalization; patient isolation; public health; quarantine; rural communities; secondary infections; viruses; western Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27268508 PMCID: PMC4994349 DOI: 10.3201/eid2209.160416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of persons with Ebola virus disease in rural areas of Liberia and Guinea, 2014–June 2015*
| Characteristic | Liberia, n = 165 | Guinea, n = 182 | Total, n = 347 |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. transmission chains | 9 | 8 | 17 |
| Laboratory-confirmed EVD | 114 (69) | 126 (69) | 240 (69) |
| Outcome | |||
| Admitted to an ETU and recovered | 49 (30) | 29 (16) | 78 (22) |
| Admitted to an ETU and died | 51 (31) | 51 (28) | 102 (29) |
| Admitted to an ETU and unknown outcome | 0 (0) | 5 (3) | 5 (1%) |
| Died at home in the community | 60 (37) | 97 (53) | 157 (45) |
| Recovered in the community | 4 (2) | 0 (0) | 4 (1) |
| Generated ≥1 secondary EVD infections | 37 (24) | 62 (39) | 99 (31) |
| Generated ≥1 secondary EVD infections by origin of source case | |||
| Source case died in the community | 31 (55) | 51 (55) | 82 (55) |
| Source case was admitted to an ETU | 5 (5) | 11 (16) | 16 (10) |
| Source case survived in the community | 1 (25) | 0 (0) | 1 (25) |
| No. days at risk for transmitting secondary infections in the community | 5.8 (5.2–6.5) | 8.1 (1.8–14.4) | 6.8 (4.0–9.6) |
| Timing of death within an ETU | |||
| Died <3 d after admission | 12 (12) | 12 (16) | 24 (12) |
| Died ≥3 d after admission or recovered | 85 (88) | 65 (84) | 150 (86) |
| Burial status of those who died at home in the community | |||
| Safely buried | NA | 38 (40) | NA |
| Not safely buried | NA | 56 (60) | NA |
*Values are no. (%) or no. (95% CI). Percentages are proportions of data not missing. ETU, Ebola treatment unit; EVD, Ebola virus disease; NA, not available.
Figure 1Percentile distribution, by number of secondary infections, of persons with Ebola virus disease (EVD) in rural outbreaks in Liberia and Guinea, 2014–2015. A) Comparison of persons with EVD who died at home in the community and those who were isolated and treated in Ebola treatment units (ETUs). B) Comparison of persons admitted to ETUs who died <3 days or ≥3 days after admission. Numbers above bars indicate actual counts.
Figure 2Percentile distribution, by number of secondary infections, of persons with Ebola virus disease in rural outbreaks who died at home in the community, by safe burial status, Guinea, 2015. Numbers above bars indicate actual counts.