| Literature DB >> 29191243 |
Eduardo A Undurraga1,2, Cristina Carias3, Martin I Meltzer3, Emily B Kahn3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The 2014-2016 Ebola crisis in West Africa had approximately eight times as many reported deaths as the sum of all previous Ebola outbreaks. The outbreak magnitude and occurrence of multiple Ebola cases in at least seven countries beyond Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea, hinted at the possibility of broad-scale transmission of Ebola. MAIN TEXT: Using a modeling tool developed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the Ebola outbreak, we estimated the number of Ebola cases that might have occurred had the disease spread beyond the three countries in West Africa to cities in other countries at high risk for disease transmission (based on late 2014 air travel patterns). We estimated Ebola cases in three scenarios: a delayed response, a Liberia-like response, and a fast response scenario. Based on our estimates of the number of Ebola cases that could have occurred had Ebola spread to other countries beyond the West African foci, we emphasize the need for improved levels of preparedness and response to public health threats, which is the goal of the Global Health Security Agenda. Our estimates suggest that Ebola could have potentially spread widely beyond the West Africa foci, had local and international health workers and organizations not committed to a major response effort. Our results underscore the importance of rapid detection and initiation of an effective, organized response, and the challenges faced by countries with limited public health systems. Actionable lessons for strengthening local public health systems in countries at high risk of disease transmission include increasing health personnel, bolstering primary and critical healthcare facilities, developing public health infrastructure (e.g. laboratory capacity), and improving disease surveillance. With stronger local public health systems infectious disease outbreaks would still occur, but their rapid escalation would be considerably less likely, minimizing the impact of public health threats such as Ebola.Entities:
Keywords: Communicable diseases; Ebola virus; Epidemics; Global health; Guinea; Liberia; Sierra Leone; Transmission; Viruses; Western Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29191243 PMCID: PMC5710062 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-017-0373-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Fig. 1Illustrative scenarios showing the potential broad-scale transmission of Ebola to cities in countries beyond Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia. Notes: Scenarios showing potential number of cases in each city assume either 10 or 100 cases before detection and initiation of an effective response. Further, in each city, the speed at which an Ebola outbreak was assumed to be brought under control was modeled using one of three control scenarios. These scenarios were either faster, equal or slower than the speed of the control of the Liberian Ebola epidemic, and the estimates adjusted for population density. Cities were allocated to each control scenario based on their country’s World Bank economic classification (see Additional file for further details). The complete results of the estimated number of cases in each country for all control scenarios can found in the Additional file : Appendix S2, Table S6 [32]
Fig. 2Ebola cases per city in case of intra-country transmission (selected countries). Note: Scenarios showing potential number of cases in each city assume either 10 or 100 cases before detection and initiation of an effective response. In each city, the speed at which an Ebola outbreak was assumed to be brought under control was modeled using one of three control scenarios. These scenarios were either faster, equal or slower than the speed of the control of the Liberian Ebola epidemic, and the estimates adjusted for population density. Cities were allocated to each control scenario based on their country’s World Bank economic classification (see text and Supplemental material for further details). The specific numbers in this figure are shown in Additional file : Appendix S2, Table S7
Characteristics of the response to the 2014–2016 Ebola outbreak and actionable lessons learned for local and global response preparedness and capabilitiesa
| Characteristics of the 2014–2016 Ebola Outbreak that increased the risk of spread beyond West Africa | Challenges and suggested measures for local and global response preparedness |
|---|---|
| Slow detection of Ebola |
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| Lack of a coherent, predictable, organized global response |
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| Limited national public health systems and, closely related, potential inability of the international community to respond to multiple outbreak foci, beyond West Africa |
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| Inability to concurrently support multiple public health programs in West Africa, including malaria, HIV, childhood vaccination, and maternity services. |
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| Insufficient preventive and treatment technologies available |
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| Larger outbreaks need international, external funding |
|
aTable was informed by the Ebola response efforts and previous research and reports, including [3, 9, 14, 52, 60–62]