| Literature DB >> 32326940 |
Peninah M Munyua1, M Kariuki Njenga2, Eric M Osoro3, Clayton O Onyango4, Austine O Bitek5, Athman Mwatondo3, Mathew K Muturi5, Norah Musee4, Godfrey Bigogo6, Elkanah Otiang6, Fredrick Ade6, Sara A Lowther4,7, Robert F Breiman8, John Neatherlin4,7,9, Joel Montgomery7, Marc-Alain Widdowson4,7.
Abstract
More than 75% of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in origin and a transdisciplinary, multi-sectoral One Health approach is a key strategy for their effective prevention and control. In 2004, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention office in Kenya (CDC Kenya) established the Global Disease Detection Division of which one core component was to support, with other partners, the One Health approach to public health science. After catalytic events such as the global expansion of highly pathogenic H5N1 and the 2006 East African multi-country outbreaks of Rift Valley Fever, CDC Kenya supported key Kenya government institutions including the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, and Fisheries to establish a framework for multi-sectoral collaboration at national and county level and a coordination office referred to as the Zoonotic Disease Unit (ZDU). The ZDU has provided Kenya with an institutional framework to highlight the public health importance of endemic and epidemic zoonoses including RVF, rabies, brucellosis, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus, anthrax and other emerging issues such as anti-microbial resistance through capacity building programs, surveillance, workforce development, research, coordinated investigation and outbreak response. This has led to improved outbreak response, and generated data (including discovery of new pathogens) that has informed disease control programs to reduce burden of and enhance preparedness for endemic and epidemic zoonotic diseases, thereby enhancing global health security. Since 2014, the Global Health Security Agenda implemented through CDC Kenya and other partners in the country has provided additional impetus to maintain this effort and Kenya's achievement now serves as a model for other countries in the region.Significant gaps remain in implementation of the One Health approach at subnational administrative levels; there are sustainability concerns, competing priorities and funding deficiencies.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-sectoral collaboration global health security; Zoonosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 32326940 PMCID: PMC6696663 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6772-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Major milestones on One Health implementation and publications on zoonoses by year, CDC-Kenya, 2004–2017. Global Disease Detection Division (GDDD) now called the Division of Global Health Protection (DGHP); Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training program (FELTP); Ministry of Health (MOH)
Description of an outbreak of anthrax in humans and livestock in Nakuru County, 2016
| Anthrax is endemic in Nakuru County, where outbreaks in animals are reported annually. In June 2016, a farmer from one village sent samples from his animal that had died suddenly to the Nakuru Regional Veterinary Investigations Laboratory. These samples tested positive for anthrax. Officers at the regional laboratory notified officers at the sub-county veterinary department, who in turn immediately notified the sub-county department of health in Nakuru County. The sub-county officers of health visited the village to trace the affected farmers’ household, sensitize the community, and health workers and offered prophylaxis treatment to those who had been exposed (eaten meat from the animals or slaughtered/skinned) to dead animals. The veterinary department carried out anthrax ring vaccination of livestock as an outbreak control measure. Upon further records review at the veterinary department, the team identified that a total of 10 cows had died between May and June 2016 of suspected anthrax infection. | |
| In July 2016, ZDU and Kenya Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (FELTP) conducted an outbreak investigation at local health centers. A total of 73 exposed people on the investigators’ outbreak line-list were classified as probable cases; 29 of them were traced and 3 (10%) had developed cutaneous anthrax. The majority of those who did not develop clinical disease reported having received prophylaxis treatment at the local health center offered as public health response to the confirmed animal case. The three cutaneous anthrax cases were all exposed from the same animal carcass and all resided in the same village. The timely communication between the health sectors and intervention in those exposed resulted in fewer human cases during this outbreak. The rapid detection and control of this outbreak at its source illustrates the importance of the One Health approach for global health security. |
Fig. 2Map of Kenya showing trained County One Health Units, Veterinary Field Epidemiology and Laboratory Training Program (FELTP) graduates and research sites by county. County One Health Units (COHUs)