| Literature DB >> 34903952 |
Martin Ottolini1, Blake Cirks1, Kathleen B Madden1, Michael Rajnik1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Armed conflicts occur globally, with some regions experiencing heightened instability for many years. A better understanding of the infectious disease impact on children in armed conflict will allow aid organizations to anticipate and mitigate the most serious problems. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Children; Conflict; Displacement; Infections; Vaccine-preventable diseases (VPD)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34903952 PMCID: PMC8656442 DOI: 10.1007/s11908-021-00770-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Infect Dis Rep ISSN: 1523-3847 Impact factor: 3.725
Fig. 1The complex dynamics of armed conflict
Lessons learned from recent conflicts
| Region | Conflict/years | Affected populations | Infectious disease outbreaks and lessons learned | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global | 137 low/medium-intensity, conflicts 1990 to 2017 | 3.8 million mothers; 1.1 million children < 5 years in ecological survey | -Conflict countries have higher maternal/child mortality rates, despite all improvements within past 3 decades: poorer, less educated, and more rural families suffered much worse—lower DPT, MMR, and care for illness | Akseer et al. [ |
| 193 country analysis from 1990 to 2017 | Analysis—Uppsala Conflict Database and Global Burden of Disease Study, 2017 | -1118 unique armed conflicts reviewed, “all cause” mortality strikingly increased in children < 5, #1 etiology was communicable diseases -30 million conflict-related deaths, 2/3 indirect and in women and children | Jawad et al. [ | |
| 36 studies of ARI in crises from 1980 to 2009 | Armed conflicts, forced displacement, nat. disasters, and nutritional emergencies | -69% of crises reviewed were caused by armed conflict -ARI/AURI #1 or 2 cause of morbidity and mortality -Deaths under age 5 nearly doubled in populations in crises | Bellos et al. [ | |
| Europe (asylum seekers) | African and Eastern Mediterranean asylum seekers (peaked in 2015) | Records review from asylum seekers—Germany | -Only 67% children 1 to 4 years had documented measles immunizations -High rate of “voluntary refusal,” reported by 21% of the non-vaccinated | van den Heuvel and Stammitz [ |
| Serum from young asylum seekers—Netherlands | -Specific gaps in immunity to diphtheria, hepatitis A, hepatitis B -Measles seroprevalence lower in adults under 25 years of age | Freidl et al. [ | ||
| Antimicrobial resistance, 23 studies of recent migrants | -Pooled prevalence of AMR carriage or infection of 25.4%, up to 33% in high migrant communities; predominantly MRSA and AMR GNRs | Nellums et al. [ | ||
| Europe | Mostar, Bosnia—1993 to 2003 | Bosnian Civil War, compared to 10 years later | -Higher rates of tonsillitis and pharyngitis during conflict than afterwards -Higher rates of ARI in young infants during conflict than afterwards | Jelcic et al. [ |
| Africa | DRC 2018–2020 | 2nd prolonged Ebola outbreak, in Eastern Congo | -Ebola erupted in conflict regions in the DRC = 3481 cases (66% fatal) -Diminished after NGO’s immunized 303,000 with rVSV-ZEBOV-GP | Ebola virus disease - DRC [ |
| Darfur Conflict, Peak 2003-2004, Re-erupted in 2021 | Breakaway region of Western Sudan, over 40% of population displaced | -Est. 300,000 Excess deaths, 2.7 million displaced (most post-conflict) -Over 80% of excess deaths not due to violence -Diarrhea related deaths <5yo significantly increased in 3 years post-conflict -Infant mortality rates up to 3-fold higher in conflict regions10 years later | Degomme 2010 Boutayeb 2019 NY Times 2021 [ | |
| Liberian Civil War 1999–2003, and aftermath | Immunizations and mortality under age 5, at one rural center and 10 years post-war | -Measles vaccination dropped to 41% in 2004; rebound to 80% by 2015 -Under 6 mortality 6th highest in 1999, improved to 28th post-conflict -By 2013, #1 cause of death was malaria, #2 pneumonia | Tsai et al. [ | |
| Eastern Mediterranean region | Operation Pillar Israeli-Palestinian Nov 2012–Feb 13 | 7420 pediatric patients in a Moroccan military hospital (19.9% of all seen) | 37% Respiratory issues with 67% ILI; plus a small mumps outbreak 23% GI with 19% diarrhea, 48% intestinal helminth complaints -High coliform counts in local well water used by displaced people | Elyajouri et al. [ |
Yemeni Civil War 2014–current | Sept 2016 July 2018 > 1,000,000 cases of cholera | -Challenges to control include sanitation/hygiene, surveillance, case management, vaccination, and coordination of all resources | Spiegel et al. [ | |
Syrian Civil War 2011–present | Report on 2.7 million displaced Syrians in Turkey | -Re-emergence of measles, polio, leishmaniasis, MDR-TB, MDR-Gram-negative organisms, hepatitis A, malaria, and varicella | Doganay and Demiraslan [ | |
| > 200,000 Syrians killed, ½ of population displaced | -Rising measles, polio, leishmaniasis, diarrhea, hepatitis A, typhoid, TB -Cutaneous leishmaniasis rising in adjacent Turkey, Lebanon, & Jordan | Ozaras et al. [ | ||
| Experience of the Galilee Medical Center 2013–2016 | -83% MDR carriage from 128 children screened: 78% ESBL, 9% CRE, 7% MDR | Kassem et al. [ | ||
| Impact of Syrian Civil War on its own population and on neighboring Jordan | -6.6 M internally displaced; 4.8 million Syrians fled to Lebanon, Turkey, Egypt, Iran, and Jordan; 57% Syrian public hospitals destroyed -rise in polio, measles, TB, 40% inc. of TB in Jordanians near Syria | Nimer [ | ||
| Iraq, Syria, South Sudan, Yemen | Continual conflict leading to regional instability and internal and external population displacement | -Measles outbreaks in every region, Iraq in 2007–2009, S. Sudan 2015–2017 -Cholera emerged to a moderate degree (close to 20,000 cases) in South Sudan 2014–16 leading to a large immunization campaign in 2014 -Massive outbreak of cholera in Yemen from 2016 through 2017 -Polio briefly seen in Iraq in 2013, possibly spillover from Syria -Wild-type polio in Syria emerged in 2013 (strains similar to Pakistan) resulting in extensive immunization of nearly 25 million region children, but difficulties reaching besieged/occupied regions | Raslan et al. [ | |
| Iraq | 32 comm. diseases reported to Iraq MOH, 2004 to 2014 | -Rise of all communicable diseases during the surge in late 2007 to 2009 -Measles in 2009, mumps in 2004, 2016, rubella in 2004; cholera in 2008 | Zhao et al. [ | |
| 2005–2010 | Measles outbreaks in 2007 and 2008 18,746 suspected cases, 48% children 1 to 5; high 66% vaccine failure—cold chain and handling problems? | Jasem et al. [ | ||
| Iraq/Afghanistan | First 2060 Pediatric Wartime Admissions (military data) | 22% of Afghan and 19% of Iraq non-trauma admissions for infectious diseases, 1/3 of inpatient pediatric deaths related to primary or secondary infections | Creamer et al. [ | |
| SE Asia | Sri Lanka Civil War 1983–2009 | Post-2009 to 2014 reports of child abuse | -High rates of sexual abuse of children due to known perpetrators, child marriage due to economic collapse and poverty -Low rates of STIs or HIV, but high #s of unintended pregnancy | Sathiadas et al. [ |
| Bangladesh-Rohingya crisis since 2016 | 890,000 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar in “Cox’s Bazar” refugee camps | -Concentrated outbreak of COVID-19 in late spring to summer of 2020 -Cholera in late 2019 -Diphtheria from late 2017 through late 2019 | WHO [ | |
| The Americas | Venezuela-Internal Strife 2010–present | Update gathered from multiple comparable media, governmental, and NGO sources | -ID hard to track since Venezuelan MOH stopped publishing data in 2016 > 9000 measles 2017–2019 (76 deaths), 2019 spread to adjacent countries! -Diphtheria (270 deaths), mumps, pertussis since 2015 -Rapid rise in malaria, > 400,000 cases in 2017 alone! -In 2015, TB was reported to be at highest rates in 40 years -63% increase in infant mortality, twofold increase in maternal mortality -Degradation of infrastructure, mass emigration of professionals | Page et al. [ |
| Review of potential impact of COVID-19 on Venezuela | -Loss of nearly 80% of infrastructure, and mass emigration of professionals -Disproportionally high COVID-19 death rate in Latin America (10% of global cases but 30% of deaths) -Cofactor in accelerating Brazil’s massive outbreak -Crisis at Columbian and Brazilian borders—closed to Venezuela -Alienation of Venezuela from international aid/development organizations | Standley et al. [ |
Factors increasing infectious disease outbreaks in children
| Category | Commonly identified outbreaks | Factors increasing occurrence in conflict regions |
|---|---|---|
| Vaccine-preventable diseases | Tetanus, diphtheria, polio, pertussis, measles, mumps, varicella, | Missed/delayed pediatric immunizations Loss of maternal immunizations Difficulty tracking/recording immunization delivery |
| Environmental conditions | Acute respiratory illnesses (including COVID-19), diarrhea illnesses (cholera, others), skin conditions | Crowding, poor hygiene/sanitation, lack of clean food and water, inadequate nutrition |
| Underlying regional diseases | Vector-borne parasites (malaria, leishmaniasis), vector-borne viruses, other parasitic diseases | Inadequate shelter, degraded vector control, lack of clean food and water for consumption and hygiene |
| Diseases exacerbated by exploitation | HIV, STIs | Extreme poverty, loss of security/sexual violence, reversion to outdated practices, loss of women’s rights |