Literature DB >> 32563272

Responding to the Challenge of the Dual COVID-19 and Ebola Epidemics in the Democratic Republic of Congo-Priorities for Achieving Control.

Jean B Nachega1,2,3, Placide Mbala-Kingebeni4, John Otshudiema5, Linda M Mobula6, Wolfgang Preiser7,8, Oscar Kallay9, Susan Michaels-Strasser10, Joel G Breman11, Anne W Rimoin12, Justus Nsio4, Steve Ahuka-Mundeke4, Alimuddin Zumla13,14, Jean-Jacques Muyembe Tam-Fum4.   

Abstract

As of June 11, 2020, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has reported 4,258 COVID-19 cases with 90 deaths. With other African countries, the DRC faces the challenge of striking a balance between easing public health lockdown measures to curtail the spread of SARS-CoV-2 and minimizing both economic hardships for large sectors of the population and negative impacts on health services for other infectious and noninfectious diseases. The DRC recently controlled its tenth Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak, but COVID-19 and a new EVD outbreak beginning on June 1, 2020 in the northwest Équateur Province have added an additional burden to health services. Although the epidemiology and transmission of EVD and COVID-19 differ, leveraging the public health infrastructures and experiences from coordinating the EVD response to guide the public health response to COVID-19 is critical. Building on the DRC's 40 years of experience with 10 previous EVD outbreaks, we highlight the DRC's multi-sectoral public health approach to COVID-19, which includes community-based screening, testing, contact-tracing, risk communication, community engagement, and case management. We also highlight remaining challenges and discuss the way forward for achieving control of both COVID-19 and EVD in the DRC.

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Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32563272      PMCID: PMC7410434          DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.20-0642

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0002-9637            Impact factor:   2.345


INTRODUCTION

The spread of COVID-19 compounds the burden on health services in African countries that have experienced recurrent outbreaks of deadly zoonotic diseases in recent years. As of June 8, 2020, the WHO Africa Region has reported 135,412 COVID-19 cases, with 3,236 deaths from 45 countries.[1] Most African countries are facing difficult decisions as they attempt to balance efforts to limit the spread of SARS-CoV-2, control local outbreaks of other infectious diseases, and lessen economic hardships and food insecurity for large sectors of the population.[2-4] The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) recently experienced its tenth Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak, the second largest globally after the 2014–2016 West African epidemic, which was recently brought under control. The lessons learned, coordination mechanisms developed, and public health infrastructures put in place for EVD are guiding the public health response to COVID-19 in the DRC, although the two diseases are fundamentally different.[5] Building on four decades of experience with EVD, we discuss the DRC’s response to COVID-19 and associated challenges, priorities, and innovations for disease control.

EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SNAPSHOT

Early COVID-19 cases in Africa were mostly due to air travel of infected individuals from Europe.[2,3] The Democratic Republic of the Congo confirmed its first case of COVID-19 on March 10, 2020. Two days after returning from France, an adult male with cough and fever tested positive in the capital city of Kinshasa. The subsequent early index cases in Kinshasa also occurred among young affluent adult travelers from Europe.[3] The DRC declared a state of emergency that included travel bans on March 24, and on April 6, a lockdown of the initial COVID-19 hotspot, Gombe, an affluent health zone in Kinshasa, and other selected regions of the country, was instituted. Since then, the number has increased to 4,258 COVID-19 cases, with 90 deaths (case fatality rate of 2.1%) as of June 11, 2020.[1] To date, the disease has spread to 11 provinces and 54 (10% of total) health zones in the DRC (Figures 1 and 2). As in other African countries, the travel bans and lockdowns have had negative socioeconomic impacts on the population, most of whom live below the poverty line.
Figure 1.

Epidemiology status of COVID-19 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (as of June 14, 2020).

Figure 2.

COVID-19 daily case numbers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (March 10, 2020–June 9, 2020).

Epidemiology status of COVID-19 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (as of June 14, 2020). COVID-19 daily case numbers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (March 10, 2020–June 9, 2020).

THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO’S COVID-19 MULTI-SECTORAL NATIONAL RESPONSE COMMITTEE

A multi-sectoral national committee to organize the COVID-19 response was created following the diagnosis of the first confirmed cases (Figure 2) using lessons learned from the tenth EVD outbreak. The committee, which includes a Presidential Task Force that liaises with the President’s Office and a Strategic and Operational Management Task Force comparable to that of the Ebola Incident Management System, has support from the WHO, U.S. and Africa CDC, World Bank, and U.K. Department For International Development as part of the fourth Strategic Response Plan. The committee’s secretariat is made up of five sections with distinct responsibilities (Supplemental Figure 1). Similar organizations have been set up for the management of the response in the different provinces under the coordination of each governor and provincial minister of health. The DRC government’s COVID-19 task response structure was incorporated into existing health system structures for HIV, tuberculosis, malaria, and other noncommunicable diseases.

THE COLLISION OF EBOLA VIRUS DISEASE AND COVID-19

The tenth EVD outbreak in the DRC was announced by the Ministry of Health on August 1, 2018, ten days after the ninth outbreak was declared over. Since June 2018, approximately 300,000 people in EVD-affected health zones have been immunized with the Merck rVSV-EBOV vaccine and another 20,000 in Goma with the Janssen Ad26.ZEBOV vaccine.[6] In addition, investigational drugs were provided to nearly all patients confirmed to have EVD either through the Monitored Emergency Use of Unregistered Investigational Drugs protocol (allowing patients to receive investigational drugs under compassionate use) or as part of the Pamoja Tulinde Maisha (PALM [“Together Save Lives” in Kiswahili]) randomized controlled trial.[7] A multi-sectoral response, including standard public health measures (surveillance, contact-tracing, active case finding, infection prevention and control, risk communication, community engagement, and safe burials) coupled with community-based interventions such as cash-for-work and water and sanitation hygiene projects, as well as security, eventually controlled a complex outbreak that lasted almost 2 years. Unfortunately, hope held by health officials to declare the outbreak over on April 12, 2020 vanished as a new case was confirmed on April 10, thereby resetting the countdown clock. This was the first time an Ebola outbreak occurred in a conflict zone with an ongoing humanitarian emergency. Numerous factors contributed to the 2-year-long EVD outbreak in the eastern DRC, including a fragile and fragmented health system, population displacement, movement of contacts, disenfranchisement of the community, mistrust, and ongoing armed conflicts.[8] The DRC continues to face the challenge of having back-to-back EVD outbreaks with limited funding for existing needs. On June 1, 2020, the DRC government announced an eleventh EVD outbreak occurring in the northwest Équateur Province. The DRC Ministry of Health, in close collaboration with WHO teams who were already on the ground in Mbandaka as part of capacity building, deployed additional multidisciplinary rapid response teams from Goma and Kinshasa to support local teams. According to the WHO, as of June 9, 2020, a total of 12 EVD cases (nine confirmed and three probable) including nine deaths (case fatality rate 75%) were reported in three affected health zones (Wangata, Mbandaka, and Bikoro). Overall, 85.3% (521/611) of contacts were traced, but none turned out to be a suspected EVD case. Also, 1,495 people, including 436 frontline health professionals and close contacts, were vaccinated using the rVSV-ZEBOV-GP vaccine since the beginning of this outbreak.

LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE EBOLA EXPERIENCE AND HOW THEY ARE BEING APPLIED TO THE COVID-19 RESPONSE

The inability to act rapidly and diagnose and isolate cases of EVD was an important factor in the large-scale progression of the 2014–2016 Ebola outbreak in West Africa. A range of novel Ebola diagnostic tools were trialed and introduced, including automated PCR machines and rapid test kits for point-of-care diagnosis. System-wide support was put in place for safely transporting samples, sourcing reagents, disposal of hazardous materials, and rapid feedback of diagnostic data into public health and clinical decision-making. Although the global COVID-19 pandemic presents unique challenges, several lessons from the EVD outbreaks are informing the COVID-19 response.[6] First, the Ebola standard operating procedures (SOPs) have been used as a starting point to speed the development and updating of COVID-19 SOPs. Second, Ebola contact follow-up approaches have been leveraged for the follow-up of COVID-19 contacts, with the difference that in this case the duration of follow-up is 14 days, compared with 21 days for EVD. Because persons with COVID-19 may be asymptomatic, contact-tracing includes the collection of respiratory samples on days 7 and 12 from all high-risk contacts of a confirmed case, regardless of symptoms. Third, the follow-up of COVID-19 contacts is modeled after our EVD experience using contact-tracers and community health workers (CHCWs) at the peripheral level: health areas, neighborhoods, and villages. Fourth, the EVD response established mobile laboratories in target provinces. Currently, the COVID-19 response is planning to setup such provincial laboratories for point-of-care (PoC, e.g., GeneXpert) COVID-19 testing. Finally, based on the critical importance of community engagement and feedback during the ninth and tenth EVD outbreaks in the DRC, a mechanism to collect feedback from communities was put in place from the beginning of the COVID-19 response.

COMMUNITY-BASED COVID-19 SCREENING, TESTING, AND CONTACT-TRACING

As of May 27, 2020, there were 6,389 contacts of the 2,659 confirmed cases traced, resulting in a daily contact-tracing proportion of 92% (Table 1). Among reported confirmed cases, a total of 1,176 (44.2%) were symptomatic (Figure 2).[7,8] Various organizations involved in the COVID-19 fight across the country, supported by the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, are implementing multidisciplinary teams of physicians, nurses, midwives, pharmacists, medical students, and CHCWs for COVID-19 sensitization, screening, and testing activities endorsed by the Ministry of Health, the community, and faith leaders. When a suspect case of COVID-19 is identified based on the presence of signs or symptoms, epidemiological links, or being a high-risk contact, CHCWs send a COVID-19 alert notification to the emergency operations center, and a surveillance team is deployed to investigate. When the suspected case meets the case definition for COVID-19, a respiratory sample is taken, and the person is quarantined at home or in a designated COVID-19 isolation unit while awaiting laboratory results. If the test result is positive, then the patient is referred to the case management team to initiate care.
Table 1

COVID-19 contact-tracing in affected provinces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (March 10, 2020–May 27, 2020)

ProvinceTotal health zonesAffected health zonesTotal confirmed casesTotal contactsContacts traced
N%N%
Kinshasa3534972,3944,7694,40292
North Kivu344123552340177
Higher Katanga2751921337337100
Kongo Central3151618976074298
South Kivu34261600Na
Kwilu3426200Na
Ituri3626200Na
Democratic Republic of the Congo—nationwide51854102,6596,3895,88292

NA = not applicable.

COVID-19 contact-tracing in affected provinces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (March 10, 2020–May 27, 2020) NA = not applicable. Globally, the current gold standard test for the diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 infection is detection of viral RNA in a sample from the respiratory tract by RT-PCR.[9-11] Laboratories with skilled staff and the RT-PCR equipment to perform these tests are scarce in the DRC (Table 2); all COVID-19 testing is performed at the National Institute of Biomedical Research in Kinshasa, a national referral laboratory. Because of sample transport from the provinces, turnaround times are lengthy for samples collected from provinces, causing delays in diagnoses. Of note, PoC or near-patient solutions would be preferable.[12,13] The GeneXpert platform, already in place for TB testing across Africa, is an attractive option, but drawbacks include cost and limited supplies of SARS-CoV-2 cartridges. PoC viral antigen detection is not yet sufficiently sensitive.[14] Serological testing for antiviral antibodies is unavailable in the DRC and is unsuitable for diagnosing active COVID-19 cases.[15]
Table 2

Challenges and priority solutions for optimizing COVID-19 response in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Early and late challengesPriority solutions
1Social distancing, barrier measures, and handwashingSome community members do not believe that disease existsScale-up community COVID-19 sensitization and barrier measure messages involving community leaders, role models in music and sports, traditional leaders, etc.
Poverty levels limit respect for the application of barrier measures/socio-distancing, and handwashingScale-up distribution of sanitizers and locally-made masks to communities supported by government and multilateral donors and partners (e.g., the World Bank)
Running water is scarce in some communities
2SARS-CoV-2 testingOne laboratory at the national level, the INRB in Kinshasa, performs all the COVID-19 RT-PCR testingBuild capacity for RT-PCR SARS-CoV-2 testing at referral laboratories in provinces
Consequences: Late detection and delays in the delivery of results to provincesAcquisition and decentralization of screening and PCR testing using PoC machines in provinces
Shortage of PoC machines (e.g., GeneXpert) and reagents/cartridgesLeverage infrastructure, human resources, medical management and training platform of Ebola Viral Disease for COVID-19
Increase resources in affected provinces and adequate preparedness for provinces that are not yet affected by the virus
3Case managementInsufficient medical and personal protective equipmentIncrease logistical support (e.g., protective equipment, medical equipment, medicines, and means of transportation)
Limited technical capacity of COVID-19 case management among healthcare providersLeverage infrastructure, human resources, medical management, and training platform of Ebola viral disease for COVID-19
Limited logistical resources to carry out response activities in the province’s remote areasIncreased numbers of multidisciplinary healthcare workers and trained CHWs
Ensure continuity of care for NCDs and other comorbidities

CHCWs = community healthcare workers; DRC = Democratic Republic of the Congo; PPE = personal protection equipment; POC = point of care; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase–PCR.

Challenges and priority solutions for optimizing COVID-19 response in the Democratic Republic of the Congo CHCWs = community healthcare workers; DRC = Democratic Republic of the Congo; PPE = personal protection equipment; POC = point of care; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase–PCR.

CASE MANAGEMENT

Treatment of moderate and severe cases of COVID-19 requires hospitalization for supportive care, oxygen, and anticoagulation as per WHO guidelines.[16] Remdesivir, which has been shown to be effective in reducing the length of hospitalization for moderately severe cases, is not yet available in the DRC.[17] Weak health systems in the DRC, with limited intensive care beds, oxygen supply, ventilators, and trained staff, remain a key challenge in the management of COVID-19, especially as case numbers rise. Several hospitals were identified as reference centers for the treatment of COVID-19 as part of the National Plan. Furthermore, building on an existing innovative tele-mentoring program developed to capacitate nurses and other frontline healthcare workers, a series of in-service COVID-19 training modules covering triage, infection prevention and control, testing, maintenance of essential services, and other topics was developed. At the start of the outbreak, only 60 ventilators were available country-wide and oxygen supplies were limited, and there was minimal technical capacity to provide intensive care. A clinical protocol was developed by the case management commission with support from technical partners. Bilateral and multilateral partnerships are scaling-up donations including medical and personal protective equipment to the reference hospitals, and training has been provided to clinical staff to ensure optimal care and prevention of infection of healthcare workers.[18] Remaining challenges and priority solutions are listed in Table 2.

CONCLUSIONS AND WAY FORWARD

As the DRC decides how best to control the COVID-19 pandemic, it is essential to reflect on lessons learned from past and current EVD outbreaks. The DRC must adapt the available infrastructure and protocols to COVID-19 while embedding community needs and concerns into its response. The country must also significantly invest in its fragile health systems to ensure equity, stability, and global health security. Control of the COVID-19 pandemic in the DRC will be possible only with efficient community screening, testing, and contact-tracing as well as behavioral modification, all of which require adequate local and national resources and enough trained and protected personnel. By addressing the challenges, the DRC and other countries in Africa can limit the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health of its already vulnerable citizens. Supplemental materials
  9 in total

1.  A Randomized, Controlled Trial of Ebola Virus Disease Therapeutics.

Authors:  Sabue Mulangu; Lori E Dodd; Richard T Davey; Olivier Tshiani Mbaya; Michael Proschan; Daniel Mukadi; Mariano Lusakibanza Manzo; Didier Nzolo; Antoine Tshomba Oloma; Augustin Ibanda; Rosine Ali; Sinaré Coulibaly; Adam C Levine; Rebecca Grais; Janet Diaz; H Clifford Lane; Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum; Billy Sivahera; Modet Camara; Richard Kojan; Robert Walker; Bonnie Dighero-Kemp; Huyen Cao; Philippe Mukumbayi; Placide Mbala-Kingebeni; Steve Ahuka; Sarah Albert; Tyler Bonnett; Ian Crozier; Michael Duvenhage; Calvin Proffitt; Marc Teitelbaum; Thomas Moench; Jamila Aboulhab; Kevin Barrett; Kelly Cahill; Katherine Cone; Risa Eckes; Lisa Hensley; Betsey Herpin; Elizabeth Higgs; Julie Ledgerwood; Jerome Pierson; Mary Smolskis; Ydrissa Sow; John Tierney; Sumathi Sivapalasingam; Wendy Holman; Nikki Gettinger; David Vallée; Jacqueline Nordwall
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-11-27       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: why there is no 'silver bullet'.

Authors:  Hana Rohan; Gillian McKay
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 25.606

3.  From Easing Lockdowns to Scaling Up Community-based Coronavirus Disease 2019 Screening, Testing, and Contact Tracing in Africa-Shared Approaches, Innovations, and Challenges to Minimize Morbidity and Mortality.

Authors:  Jean B Nachega; Ashraf Grimwood; Hassan Mahomed; Geoffrey Fatti; Wolfgang Preiser; Oscar Kallay; Placide K Mbala; Jean-Jacques T Muyembe; Edson Rwagasore; Sabin Nsanzimana; Daniel Ngamije; Jeanine Condo; Mohsin Sidat; Emilia V Noormahomed; Michael Reid; Beatrice Lukeni; Fatima Suleman; Alfred Mteta; Alimuddin Zumla
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2021-01-27       Impact factor: 9.079

4.  Compassionate Use of Remdesivir for Patients with Severe Covid-19.

Authors:  Jonathan Grein; Norio Ohmagari; Daniel Shin; George Diaz; Erika Asperges; Antonella Castagna; Torsten Feldt; Gary Green; Margaret L Green; François-Xavier Lescure; Emanuele Nicastri; Rentaro Oda; Kikuo Yo; Eugenia Quiros-Roldan; Alex Studemeister; John Redinski; Seema Ahmed; Jorge Bernett; Daniel Chelliah; Danny Chen; Shingo Chihara; Stuart H Cohen; Jennifer Cunningham; Antonella D'Arminio Monforte; Saad Ismail; Hideaki Kato; Giuseppe Lapadula; Erwan L'Her; Toshitaka Maeno; Sumit Majumder; Marco Massari; Marta Mora-Rillo; Yoshikazu Mutoh; Duc Nguyen; Ewa Verweij; Alexander Zoufaly; Anu O Osinusi; Adam DeZure; Yang Zhao; Lijie Zhong; Anand Chokkalingam; Emon Elboudwarej; Laura Telep; Leighann Timbs; Ilana Henne; Scott Sellers; Huyen Cao; Susanna K Tan; Lucinda Winterbourne; Polly Desai; Robertino Mera; Anuj Gaggar; Robert P Myers; Diana M Brainard; Richard Childs; Timothy Flanigan
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2020-04-10       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  Detection of 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) by real-time RT-PCR.

Authors:  Victor M Corman; Olfert Landt; Marco Kaiser; Richard Molenkamp; Adam Meijer; Daniel Kw Chu; Tobias Bleicker; Sebastian Brünink; Julia Schneider; Marie Luisa Schmidt; Daphne Gjc Mulders; Bart L Haagmans; Bas van der Veer; Sharon van den Brink; Lisa Wijsman; Gabriel Goderski; Jean-Louis Romette; Joanna Ellis; Maria Zambon; Malik Peiris; Herman Goossens; Chantal Reusken; Marion Pg Koopmans; Christian Drosten
Journal:  Euro Surveill       Date:  2020-01

6.  Recommendations for the COVID-19 Response at the National Level Based on Lessons Learned from the Ebola Virus Disease Outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Authors:  Linda Meta Mobula; Hadia Samaha; Michel Yao; Abdou Salam Gueye; Boubacar Diallo; Chantal Umutoni; Julienne Anoko; Jean-Pierre Lokonga; Luigi Minikulu; Mathias Mossoko; Emanuele Bruni; Simone Carter; Thibaut Jombart; Ibrahima Soce Fall; Steve Ahuka-Mundeke
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2020-05-19       Impact factor: 2.345

7.  Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2-Specific Antibody Responses in Coronavirus Disease Patients.

Authors:  Nisreen M A Okba; Marcel A Müller; Wentao Li; Chunyan Wang; Corine H GeurtsvanKessel; Victor M Corman; Mart M Lamers; Reina S Sikkema; Erwin de Bruin; Felicity D Chandler; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Quentin Le Hingrat; Diane Descamps; Nadhira Houhou-Fidouh; Chantal B E M Reusken; Berend-Jan Bosch; Christian Drosten; Marion P G Koopmans; Bart L Haagmans
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2020-06-21       Impact factor: 6.883

8.  The Late Arrival of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Africa: Mitigating Pan-continental Spread.

Authors:  Jean Nachega; Moussa Seydi; Alimuddin Zumla
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2020-07-28       Impact factor: 9.079

9.  Limiting the spread of COVID-19 in Africa: one size mitigation strategies do not fit all countries.

Authors:  Shaheen Mehtar; Wolfgang Preiser; Ndèye Aissatou Lakhe; Abdoulaye Bousso; Jean-Jacques Muyembe TamFum; Oscar Kallay; Moussa Seydi; Alimuddin Zumla; Jean B Nachega
Journal:  Lancet Glob Health       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 26.763

  9 in total
  10 in total

1.  Zaire ebolavirus surveillance near the Bikoro region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo during the 2018 outbreak reveals presence of seropositive bats.

Authors:  Stephanie N Seifert; Robert J Fischer; Eeva Kuisma; Cynthia Badzi Nkoua; Gerard Bounga; Marc-Joël Akongo; Jonathan E Schulz; Beatriz Escudero-Pérez; Beal-Junior Akoundzie; Vishnou Reize Bani Ampiri; Ankara Dieudonne; Ghislain Dzeret Indolo; Serge D Kaba; Igor Louzolo; Lucette Nathalie Macosso; Yanne Mavoungou; Valchy Bel-Bebi Miegakanda; Rock Aimé Nina; Kevin Tolovou Samabide; Alain I Ondzie; Francine Ntoumi; César Muñoz-Fontela; Jean-Vivien Mombouli; Sarah H Olson; Chris Walzer; Fabien Roch Niama; Vincent J Munster
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2022-06-22

2.  Mental distress before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal study among communities affected by Ebola virus disease in the DR Congo.

Authors:  Jude Mary Cénat; Seyed Mohammad Mahdi Moshirian Farahi; Rose Darly Dalexis; Wina Paul Darius; Jacqueline Bukaka; Oléa Balayulu-Makila; Noble Luyeye; Daniel Derivois; Cécile Rousseau
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2022-05-27       Impact factor: 11.225

3.  COVID-19 Pandemic: Knowledge and Attitudes in Public Markets in the Former Katanga Province of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Authors:  Trésor Carsi Kuhangana; Caleb Kamanda Mbayo; Joseph Pyana Kitenge; Arlène Kazadi Ngoy; Taty Muta Musambo; Paul Musa Obadia; Patrick D M C Katoto; Célestin Banza Lubaba Nkulu; Benoit Nemery
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 3.390

4.  The epidemiological characteristics of COVID-19 in Libya during the ongoing-armed conflict.

Authors:  Mohamed Ali Daw; Abdallah Hussean El-Bouzedi; Mohamed Omar Ahmed; Ali Ali Alejenef
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2020-11-05

Review 5.  Early stage risk communication and community engagement (RCCE) strategies and measures against the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic crisis.

Authors:  Yanjie Zhang; Ernest Tambo; Ingrid C Djuikoue; Gildas K Tazemda; Michael F Fotsing; Xiao-Nong Zhou
Journal:  Glob Health J       Date:  2021-02-14

Review 6.  Urban health nexus with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) preparedness and response in Africa: Rapid scoping review of the early evidence.

Authors:  Robert Kaba Alhassan; Jerry John Nutor; Aaron Asibi Abuosi; Agani Afaya; Solomon Salia Mohammed; Maxwel Ayindenaba Dalaba; Mustapha Immurana; Alfred Kwesi Manyeh; Desmond Klu; Matilda Aberese-Ako; Phidelia Theresa Doegah; Evelyn Acquah; Edward Nketiah-Amponsah; John Tampouri; Samuel Kaba Akoriyea; Paul Amuna; Evelyn Kokor Ansah; Margaret Gyapong; Seth Owusu-Agyei; John Owusu Gyapong
Journal:  SAGE Open Med       Date:  2021-02-11

Review 7.  COVID-19 surveillance systems in African countries.

Authors:  Yusuff Adebayo Adebisi; Adrian Rabe; Don Eliseo Lucero-Prisno Iii
Journal:  Health Promot Perspect       Date:  2021-12-19

Review 8.  What could explain the late emergence of COVID-19 in Africa?

Authors:  R Lalaoui; S Bakour; D Raoult; P Verger; C Sokhna; C Devaux; B Pradines; J-M Rolain
Journal:  New Microbes New Infect       Date:  2020-09-22

9.  High Prevalence of Anti-Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (Anti-SARS-CoV-2) Antibodies After the First Wave of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo: Results of a Cross-sectional Household-Based Survey.

Authors:  Antoine N Nkuba; Sheila M Makiala; Emilande Guichet; Paul M Tshiminyi; Yannick M Bazitama; Marc K Yambayamba; Benito M Kazenza; Trésor M Kabeya; Elysee B Matungulu; Lionel K Baketana; Naomi M Mitongo; Guillaume Thaurignac; Fabian H Leendertz; Veerle Vanlerberghe; Raphaël Pelloquin; Jean-François Etard; David Maman; Placide K Mbala; Ahidjo Ayouba; Martine Peeters; Jean-Jacques T Muyembe; Eric Delaporte; Steve M Ahuka
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2022-03-09       Impact factor: 9.079

Review 10.  COVID-19: The Current Situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Authors:  Carl Agisha Juma; Nestor Kalume Mushabaa; Feruzi Abdu Salam; Attaullah Ahmadi; Don Eliseo Lucero-Prisno
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2020-10-09       Impact factor: 3.707

  10 in total

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