| Literature DB >> 32324070 |
Karen A Martins1, Rodgers R Ayebare1, Nahid Bhadelia1, Francis Kiweewa1, Peter Waitt1, Derrick Mimbe1, Stephen Okello1, Prossy Naluyima1, David M Brett-Major1, James V Lawler1, Monica Millard1, Richard Walwema1, Anthony P Cardile1, Chi Ritchie1, Antonia Kwiecien1, Helen Badu1, Benjamin J Espinosa1, Charmagne Beckett1, Sina Bavari1, Saima Zaman1, George Christopher1, Danielle V Clark1, Mohammed Lamorde1, Hannah Kibuuka1.
Abstract
The West Africa Ebola virus disease outbreak of 2014-2016 demonstrated that responses to viral hemorrhagic fever epidemics must go beyond emergency stopgap measures and should incorporate high-quality medical care and clinical research. Optimal patient management is essential to improving outcomes, and it must be implemented regardless of geographical location or patient socioeconomic status. Coupling clinical research with improved care has a significant added benefit: Improved data quality and management can guide the development of more effective supportive care algorithms and can support regulatory approvals of investigational medical countermeasures (MCMs), which can alter the cycle of emergency response to reemerging pathogens. However, executing clinical research during outbreaks of high-consequence pathogens is complicated and comes with ethical and research regulatory challenges. Aggressive care and excellent quality control must be balanced by the requirements of an appropriate infection prevention and control posture for healthcare workers and by overcoming the resource limitations inherent in many outbreak settings. The Joint Mobile Emerging Disease Intervention Clinical Capability was established in 2015 to develop a high-quality clinical trial capability in Uganda to support rigorous evaluation of MCMs targeting high-consequence pathogens like Ebola virus. This capability assembles clinicians, laboratorians, clinical researchers, logisticians, and regulatory professionals trained in infection prevention and control and in good clinical and good clinical laboratory practices. The resulting team is prepared to provide high-quality medical care and clinical research during high-consequence outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: Infectious diseases; Medical countermeasures; Outbreak response; Uganda; Viral hemorrhagic fevers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32324070 DOI: 10.1089/hs.2019.0112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Secur ISSN: 2326-5094