| Literature DB >> 36158935 |
Otim Patrick Cossy Ramadan1, Kibebu Kinfu Berta2, Joseph Francis Wamala2, Sylvester Maleghemi2, John Rumunu3, Caroline Ryan1, Alice Igale Ladu2, Julu Louis Kenyi Joseph2, Abraham Aduet Abenego2, Fabian Ndenzako2, Olushayo Oluseun Olu1.
Abstract
Introduction: the emergence and re-emergence of zoonotic diseases have threatened both human and animal health globally since their identification in the 20th century. Rift Valley fever (RVF) virus is a recurrent zoonotic disease in South Sudan, with the earliest RVF cases confirmed in 2007 in Kapoeta North County, Eastern Equatoria state.Entities:
Keywords: Rift Valley fever (RVF); South Sudan; one health; surveillance; zoonotic disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36158935 PMCID: PMC9474954 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2022.42.1.33769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1timeline of the Rift Valley Fever Outbreak, Yirol East county, South Sudan- December 2017 to April 2018
socio-demographic characteristics and epidemiological distribution of RVF in South Sudan-December 2017 to December 2018
| Variable | Category | Confirmed cases (6) (%) | Probable cases (n=3) (%) | Suspected cases (n=16) (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient outcome | Alive | 6(100%) | 0(0.0%) | 14(87.5%) |
| Died | 0(0.0%) | 3(100.0%) | 2(12.5%) | |
| Median | 27 | 15 | 11 | |
| Gender | Female | 3(50.0%) | 2(66.7%) | 38(50.7%) |
| Male | 3(50.0%) | 1(33.3%) | 37(49.3%) | |
| Exposure to sick or dead animal | Yes | 1(16.7%) | 2(66.7%) | 13(81.2%) |
| No | 5(83.3%) | 1(33.3%) | 3(18.7%) | |
| Proximity to abortion or dead young domestic animals in homestead | Yes | 4(66.7%) | 1(33.3%) | 13(81.2%) |
| No | 2(33.3%) | 2(66.7%) | 3(18.7%) |
summary of laboratory investigations, rift valley outbreak, South Sudan-December 2017-December 2018
| Samples shipped to WHO/FAO collaborating laboratories | Number |
|---|---|
| Human | 55 |
| Livestock | 28 |
|
| 83 |
| Human samples - PCR negative for Ebola, Marburg, CCHF, and RVF | 48 |
| Human samples - RVF serology - IgM and IgG positive (high titers) | 1 |
| Human samples - RVF serology - IgG positive (high titers) | 5 |
| Human sample-RVF serology-Not known | 1 |
|
| 55 |
| Livestock samples - RVF serology - IgM positive | 3 |
| Livestock samples - RVF serology - IgG positive | 6 |
| Livestock sample-RVF serology negative (both IgM and IgG) | 19 |
|
| 28 |
list of symptoms among RFV cases, South Sudan-December 2017 to December 2018
| Symptoms | Confirmed RVF (n=6) | Probable cases (n=3) |
|---|---|---|
| Bleeding | 3(50.0%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Breast pain | 1(16.6%) | 0(0.0%) |
| Chest pain | 1(16.6%) | 0(0%) |
| Convulsion | 0(0.0%) | 1(33.3%) |
| Cough | 1(16.6%) | 0(0.0%) |
| Dyspnoea | 1(16.6%) | 0(0%) |
| Fever | 5(83.3%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Headache | 5(83.3%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Joint pain | 4(66.6%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Muscle pain | 2(33.3%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Pain behind the eye | 1(16.6%) | 0(0.0%) |
| Sore throat | 6(100%) | 3(100.0%) |
| Vomiting | 0(0.0%) | 0(0.0%) |
(SWOT) analysis of Rift valley fever outbreak response, South Sudan-December 2017 and December to April 2018
| Domain | Strengths | Weakness | Opportunities | Threats |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outbreak response coordination | 1. Public health emergency operation center function to coordinate public health emergency response. | 1. Weak public health coordination at the state level. | 1. Availability of state ministry of health structures and leadership, and state health partners (non-governmental and UN Organizations). | 1. The development of the national One Health approach strategy was not finalized, i.e. still at the draft stage. |
| 2. Trained multi-disciplinary rapid response team are available at the national state level | 2. Take four months (December 2017 to March 2018) to declare an outbreak of RVF. | 2. Availability of trained rapid response Team in 10 states of South Sudan. | 2. Lack of multi-sectorial coordination at the state and county level. | |
| 3. Multi-sectoral coordination at national level mostly attended by public health experts from human health, | ||||
| 4. Bad roads network and insecurity that hinders deployment of outbreak investigation and response team. | ||||
| Disease surveillance at animal-human ecosystem interface | 1. The South Sudan national IDSR guideline listed RVF as one of reportable diseases. | 1. Delayed detection, notification and confirmation of RVF cases (index case date of onset was 7th December, notification 28th December, confirmation on the 3rd January 2018). | 1. Availability of the IDSR guideline and surveillance tools. | 1. Shortage of human and financial resources. |
| 2. Surveillance tools such as case definitions, and reporting formats were printed and distributed. | 2. Failure to detect and notify livestock deaths prior to first human cases. | 2. Existence of early warning, alert and response system (EWARS). | 2. High turnover of trained health workers. | |
| 3. Existence animal and human health implementing partners. | 3. Weak collaboration among stakeholders at national and state level. | |||
| National diagnostic laboratory | 1. There are functional national public health laboratory and central veterinary diagnostic laboratory. | 2. Lack of reagents to confirm animal and human samples. | 1. The National Public Health Laboratory has RT-PCR machine to confirm a number of viral hemorrhagic disease such as Ebola, Marburg, Yellow Fever, CCHF and RVF. | 1. Lack of interest of donors and financial institute to support the laboratories. |
| 3. Lack of resources such as trained manpower, finance and supplies. | 2. Existence of partners including the UN organizations. | 2. Lack of motivation packages and salary to retain trained manpower at public health and veterinary laboratories. | ||
| 3. The laboratory results for the animal health took longer than expected | ||||
| One Health approach | 1. Incorporation of One Health approach into the South Sudan National Action Plan for Health Security (NAPHS) 2020-2024 | 3. Lack of clearly developed national One Health approach strategy. | 5. Existence of partners at national and state level. | 1. Both government and partners high staff turnover |
| 2. Joint risk assessment (JRA) was conducted for the prioritization of Zoonotic diseases | 4. Irregular or no coordination among One Health approach implementing partners. | |||
| 6. The IDSR guidelines prioritized a number of zoonotic disease for surveillance. |