| Literature DB >> 29119098 |
Rasha Raslan1, Skye El Sayegh1, Sana Chams2, Nour Chams2, Angelo Leone3, Inaya Hajj Hussein4.
Abstract
For the past few decades, the Eastern Mediterranean Region has been one area of the world profoundly shaped by war and political instability. On-going conflict and destruction have left the region struggling with innumerable health concerns that have claimed the lives of many. Wars, and the chaos they leave behind, often provide the optimal conditions for the growth and re-emergence of communicable diseases. In this article, we highlight a few of the major re-emerging vaccine preventable diseases in four countries of the Eastern Mediterranean Region that are currently affected by war leading to a migration crisis: Iraq, South Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. We will also describe the impact these infections have had on patients, societies, and national health care services. This article also describes the efforts, both local and international, which have been made to address these crises, as well as future endeavors that can be done to contain and control further devastation left by these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cholera; measles; poliomyelitis; re-emerging infections; refugees; vaccine-preventable diseases
Year: 2017 PMID: 29119098 PMCID: PMC5661270 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Map of the Eastern Mediterranean Region. The four countries of interest, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria, and Yemen are depicted in red. The main migratory routes of refugees from these countries to neighboring countries are mapped with arrows.
Summary of three major re-emerging vaccine-preventable diseases in the Eastern Mediterranean Region.
| Human disease | Infectious agent | Mode of transmission | Symptoms | Treatment | Available vaccine | Re-emerging EMR countries |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poliomyelitis | Polio virus | Fecal–oral | Asymptomatic, may affect the CNS and cause paralysis | Supportive | Syria, Iraq | |
| Measles | Measles virus | Direct contact with infectious droplet or by airborne spread | Maculopapular rash, fever, cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, koplik spots | Supportive | Either alone or as part of a combination (e.g., MMR, MMRV) | Iraq, South Sudan, Syria, Yemen |
| Cholera | Fecal–oral through contaminated food and water | Profuse watery diarrhea (“rice-water” diarrhea), symptoms of dehydration | Rehydration therapy, antibiotics for severe illness | Two oral killed vaccines: Dukoral and Shanchol (Shantha Biotechnics-Sanofi Pasteur) | South Sudan, Yemen |
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