| Literature DB >> 34909076 |
Evans Nyasimi Mokaya1, Zingbondo Isaac2, Nathan Atem Anyuon2.
Abstract
During January 2018-June 2020, Aweil East confirmed five measles outbreaks. In March 2020, Aweil East reported twenty measles IgM+ cases. Before this outbreak, Aweil East had confirmed an outbreak in late November 2019. Even after conducting outbreak reactive vaccinations (ORV) in December 2019 and February 2020, measles spread was not interrupted. The nationally supported measles follow-up campaign (MFUC) conducted in late February 2020 was deferred in Aweil East because of the February ORV. We reviewed the measles data collected through passive and active surveillance. A matched case-control study was conducted to evaluate potential exposures. Face-to-face interviews with cases and controls using a semi-structured questionnaire were used to collect demographics, disease, and exposures related data. A total of 687 cases with eight deaths; attack and case fatality rate of 123/100,000 population and 1.16%, respectively. Among the cases, 51.8% were male, the median age was four years, and 59% of cases ≥9 months were unvaccinated. Eighty point six percent (80.6%) of cases reported after the February ORV were unvaccinated. The outbreak peaked in late March 2020. Unvaccinated persons had higher odds of getting measles (adjusted odds ratio (AOR)=8.569; 95% CI [1.41- 53.4], p=0.02). Non exposed persons had a lower odd of getting measles (AOR=0.114; 95% CI [0.02-0.61], p=0.011). During 2018-2019, the accumulated number of unvaccinated children (18,587) is more than a birth cohort of the county. Persistent low routine vaccination is the most critical driver of the measles outbreaks. Low-quality ORV and the intermediate population density are secondary drivers of the outbreaks. Copyright: Evans Nyasimi Mokaya et al.Entities:
Keywords: Measles outbreak; South Sudan; outbreak reactive vaccination; vaccination
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34909076 PMCID: PMC8607948 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.40.87.28370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1number of measles cases by date of onset of rash (n=687), Aweil East county, South Sudan, January 1-June 29th, 2020
Figure 2vaccination status of measles cases by age group, Aweil East, South Sudan, January-June 29th 2020 (n=562); (125 under one children were not eligible for vaccination)
age-specific attack rates of measles cases, Aweil East county, South Sudan, January-June 29th 2020 (n=678)
| Age category | No. of cases | population | Attack rate/100,000 |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 1 | 141 | 25131 | 561 |
| 1-4 years | 214 | 69809 | 306 |
| 5-14 years | 207 | 167540 | 124 |
| ≥ 15 years | 125 | 295988 | 42 |
attack rates of measles cases by Payam, Aweil East county, South Sudan, January-June 29th 2020 (n=678)
| Payams | Frequency | Population | Case /100,000 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baac | 293 | 117587 | 249 |
| Madhol | 40 | 94528 | 42 |
| Malualbai | 26 | 68907 | 38 |
| Mangartong | 262 | 84351 | 311 |
| Mangok | 17 | 52531 | 32 |
| Wunlang | 37 | 85118 | 43 |
| Yargot | 12 | 55446 | 22 |
| Total | 687 | 558468 | 123 |
number of susceptible children in Aweil East, 2018-2019 *response SIA not factored
| Year | Estimated Population (< 1 year) | Vaccinated children | Unreached children | Unprotected children due to vaccine failure | *Total unprotected |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 17,591 | 9,744 | 7,847 | 1,462 | 9,309 |
| 2019 | 18,118 | 10,400 | 7,718 | 1,560 | 9,278 |
| 18,587 |
Figure 3reasons for failure to vaccinate, 5 Payams´ in Aweil East, South Sudan, January-May 2020