| Literature DB >> 28838182 |
Charles A Michael1, Ndadilnasiya Waziri1, Rajni Gunnala2, Oladayo Biya3, Katrina Kretsinger3, Eric Wiesen3, James L Goodson3, Lisa Esapa3, Saheed Gidado1, Belinda Uba1, Patrick Nguku2, Stephen Cochi3.
Abstract
From 2012 to date, Nigeria has been the focus of intensified polio eradication efforts. Large investments made by multiple partner organizations and the federal Ministry of Health to support strategies and resources, including personnel, for increasing vaccination coverage and improved performance monitoring paid off, as the number of wild poliovirus (WPV) cases detected in Nigeria were reduced significantly, from 122 in 2012 to 6 in 2014. No WPV cases were detected in Nigeria in 2015 and as at March 2017, only 4 WPV cases had been detected. Given the momentum gained toward polio eradication, these resources seem well positioned to help advance other priority health agendas in Nigeria, particularly the control of vaccine-preventable diseases, such as measles. Despite implementation of mass measles vaccination campaigns, measles outbreaks continue to occur regularly in Nigeria, leading to high morbidity and mortality rates for children <5 years of age. The National Stop Transmission of Polio (NSTOP) program was collaboratively established in 2012 to create a network of staff working at national, state, and district levels in areas deemed high risk for vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks. As an example of how the polio legacy can create long-lasting improvements to public health beyond polio, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will transition >180 NSTOP officers to provide technical experience to improve measles surveillance, routine vaccination coverage, and outbreak investigation and response in high-risk areas.Entities:
Keywords: Nigeria; legacy; measles; polio
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28838182 PMCID: PMC5853438 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jix014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Nigeria NSTOP Program Functions, 2016
| Function | Primary Subfunctions | Types of Activities | Personnel Involved |
|---|---|---|---|
| Implementation planning and service delivery | Provide support for priority states in polio eradication and SIA; strengthen RI; support nonpolio VPD and non-VPD health initiatives; MSTs | SIA planning and implementation, outbreak investigation and response, logistical support; supportive supervisory visits for fixed and outreach sessions; support conduct of measles SIA, support activities to reduce malaria burden; deploy MSTs to support SIAs especially in hard-to-reach areas | Senior field coordinator (1), state field coordinator (17), NSLOs (184), RI field coordinator (1); (203 total) |
| Monitoring, data management, and research | Monitoring and evaluation; technical support for development of a high-quality system for monitoring national RI; operations research; data analysis and reporting | Monitor progress of NSTOP program activities; provide leadership on the use of DHIS2 dashboard; conduct operational research studies; support use of data for decision making | NSLOs (184), DHIS field coordinator (1), data manager (5), DHIS implementation officer (3), data technical officer (4), monitoring and evaluation officer (1); (198 total) |
| Disease surveillance | Strengthening AFP and other VPD surveillance | Support activities to strengthen AFP and other VPD surveillance | NSLOs (184), state field coordinators (17), surveillance field coordinator (1); (202 total) |
| Community engagement, communications and political advocacy | Build relationships with local community leaders, partner organizations, and federal Ministry of Health; demand creation for RI and healthcare services; increase government support for program objectives | Enlist community leaders and conduct community dialogue to improve RI acceptance, advocate for government ownership | NSLOs (184), state field coordinators (17), surveillance field coordinator (1); (202 total) |
| Capacity building | Training | Provide training in 9 RI thematic areas and conduct posttraining field assignments | Senior field coordinator (1), state field coordinators (17), NSLOs (184), RI field coordinator (1), training field coordinator (1), data technical officers (4), DHIS field coordinator (1), DHIS implementation officers (3); (total 212) |
| Resource mobilization and donor coordination | Resource mobilization | Advocate to government and partners for sustainable funding for NSTOP activities | National coordinator (1), deputy national coordinator (1), NSTOP administrator (1); (3 total) |
| Policy development, strategic planning, and oversight | Participate in national, state, and LGA level meetings on immunization policy and strategic plans; provide data and information at the national and state levels for decision making | Participate in task force and working group meetings at all levels | State field coordinators (17), NSLOs (184); (201 total) |
| Partnerships and coordination | Work closely with other PEI partners to make evidence-based decisions to improve campaign planning and implementation | Coordinate with government and partner organizations to achieve polio eradication objectives, support control of other outbreaks (eg, Ebola) | Senior field coordinator (1), state field coordinators (17), RI field coordinator (1), national coordinator (1), deputy national coordinator (1), training field coordinator (1), DHIS field coordinator (1), surveillance coordinator (1), technical support to emergency operation center (1); (25 total) |
| Management and accountability | General management; general administration | Prepare and update annual work plans, schedule quarterly review meetings. | National coordinator (1), deputy national coordinator (1), NSTOP administrator (1), program administration team (14); (17 total) |
Abbreviations: AFP, acute flaccid paralysis; DHIS, District Health Information System; LGA, local government area; MSTs, management support teams; NSLOs, NSTOP LGA officers; NSTOP, National Stop Transmission of Polio; PEI, polio eradication initiative; RI, routine immunization; SIA, supplementary immunization activity; VPD, vaccine-preventable disease.
Figure 1.Map of Nigeria showing distribution of Nigeria National Stop Transmission of Polio (NSTOP)–supported local government areas (LGAs), including LGAs supported in security-compromised Borno state, 2013–2016. Abbreviations: FCT, Federal Capital Territory; IDP, internally displaced person; NSLOs, NSTOP LGA officers.
Figure 2.Measles coverage by states in the 2015–2016 supplementary immunization activity in Nigeria (n = 16650). Source: 2016 measures Hanovia Medical Limited measles vaccination coverage survey report. Abbreviation: FCT, Federal Capital Territory.
Figure 3.Reported number of measles cases and estimated coverage with the first dose of measles-containing vaccine (MCV1), Nigeria, 1980–2015 [16, 17]. Arrows indicate phased national measles vaccination campaigns, according to WHO data (http://ww.who.int/immunization/monitoring_surveillance/data/en).