| Literature DB >> 35402201 |
Passoret Vounba1, Severin Loul1, Ludovic F Tamadea1, Joël F D Siawaya2,3.
Abstract
Laboratory systems have been largely neglected on the margins of health systems in Africa. However, since the 2000s, many African countries have benefited from massive investments to strengthen laboratory capacities through projects fighting priority diseases (HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria). This review examined the laboratory capacities of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS). Online research using specific terms was carried out. Studies published between 2000 and 2021 on the role of the laboratory in disease and antimicrobial resistance surveillance in the 11 ECCAS countries were considered. The number of human and animal health laboratories meeting international standards was very low in the sub-region. There were only seven International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 15189-accredited human health laboratories, with five in Cameroon and two in Rwanda. There were five high biosafety level (BSL) laboratories (one BSL3 laboratory each in Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo, and one BSL4 laboratory in Gabon) and three ISO 17025-accredited laboratories in the ECCAS sub-region. Only six countries currently have whole-genome sequencing devices, which is insufficient for a sub-region as large and populous as ECCAS. Yet, a plethora of pathogens, particularly haemorrhagic viruses, are endemic in these countries. The need for laboratory capacity strengthening following a One Health approach is imperative. Since emerging and re-emerging zoonotic infectious diseases are projected to triple in frequency over the next 50 years and given the inextricable link between human and animal health, actors in the two health sectors must collaborate to preserve world health.Entities:
Keywords: Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS); One Health; antimicrobial resistance; epidemics; laboratory capacity; laboratory strengthening
Year: 2022 PMID: 35402201 PMCID: PMC8991180 DOI: 10.4102/ajlm.v11i1.1570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr J Lab Med ISSN: 2225-2002
FIGURE 1Country scores for laboratory capacity assessment in the ECCAS countries.
Role of the laboratory system in achieving the goals of the WHO’s global plan against AMR.
| WHO’s strategic objectives | In clinical care | In public health |
|---|---|---|
| 1) Increase awareness and understanding of AMR through communication, education and training | Adequate training of clinicians and other healthcare professionals on AMR. Patient education to reduce unnecessary demand for antimicrobials. | Updated AMR reports to ministries of health and policymakers. Inform the media and all stakeholders about AMR. Communicate the threat of irrational antimicrobial use. |
| 2) Strengthen knowledge and evidence base through surveillance and research | Correctly identify the aetiology of human and animal infections. Monitor the effectiveness of antibacterial treatment. Communicate the results of antibiograms. Pilot and implement new technologies that could increase the access and speed of testing or reduce its cost. | Accelerate the search for rapid diagnosis of infections. Implement quality assurance for antibiotic susceptibility testing. Develop AMR surveillance strategies at the human-animal-ecosystem interface. Develop surveillance plans based on national AMR laboratories. Implement antimicrobial stewardship programmes. |
| 3) Reduce the incidence of infections through effective sanitation, hygiene and infection control measures | Support infection control by identifying and separating patients infected with resistant pathogens. Allow tracking of sources for infections. | Promote rapid and effective antibiotic therapy so that pathogens are less likely to be transmitted. Prevent epidemics through early identification of outbreaks and improved management and containment. Provide laboratory support to assess health risks. |
| 4) Optimise the use of antimicrobial drugs in human and animal health | Replace the broad-spectrum regimen with narrow-spectrum drugs, thereby reducing the risk of antibiotic-associated infections. | Promote the application of surveillance data to national and regional pharmaceutical policy. Preventive withdrawal of certain antimicrobials in livestock, especially those that could cause cross-resistance with antimicrobials used in human health. |
| 5) Make the economic case for sustainable investments | Reduce drug costs by allowing the cheapest effective drug to be selected rationally. | Determine the true cost of AMR to provide economic evidence to support the replacement of antimicrobial use with vaccines and other preventive strategies. |
Source: Please see the full reference list of the article, World Health Organization. Plan d’action mondial pour combattre la résistance aux antimicrobiens [homepage on the Internet]. Genève: OMS, 2015 [cited 2020 Dec 19]; 32 p. Available from: https://www.who.int/antimicrobial-resistance/global-action-plan/fr/, for more information
AMR, antimicrobial resistance; WHO, World Health Organization.
FIGURE 2Fishbone diagram for medical laboratory analysis showing the focal elements in the capacity strengthening strategy.