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Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone

INTRODUCTION: The scale and geographical distribution of the current outbreak in West Africa raised doubts as to the effectiveness of established methods of control. Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) was first detected in Sierra Leone in May 2014 in Kailahun district. Despite high case numbers elsewhere in...

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Autores principales: Lokuge, Kamalini, Caleo, Grazia, Greig, Jane, Duncombe, Jennifer, McWilliam, Nicholas, Squire, James, Lamin, Manjo, Veltus, Emily, Wolz, Anja, Kobinger, Gary, de la Vega, Marc-Antoine, Gbabai, Osman, Nabieu, Sao, Lamin, Mohammed, Kremer, Ronald, Danis, Kostas, Banks, Emily, Glass, Kathryn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4784943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26959413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004498
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author Lokuge, Kamalini
Caleo, Grazia
Greig, Jane
Duncombe, Jennifer
McWilliam, Nicholas
Squire, James
Lamin, Manjo
Veltus, Emily
Wolz, Anja
Kobinger, Gary
de la Vega, Marc-Antoine
Gbabai, Osman
Nabieu, Sao
Lamin, Mohammed
Kremer, Ronald
Danis, Kostas
Banks, Emily
Glass, Kathryn
author_facet Lokuge, Kamalini
Caleo, Grazia
Greig, Jane
Duncombe, Jennifer
McWilliam, Nicholas
Squire, James
Lamin, Manjo
Veltus, Emily
Wolz, Anja
Kobinger, Gary
de la Vega, Marc-Antoine
Gbabai, Osman
Nabieu, Sao
Lamin, Mohammed
Kremer, Ronald
Danis, Kostas
Banks, Emily
Glass, Kathryn
author_sort Lokuge, Kamalini
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The scale and geographical distribution of the current outbreak in West Africa raised doubts as to the effectiveness of established methods of control. Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) was first detected in Sierra Leone in May 2014 in Kailahun district. Despite high case numbers elsewhere in the country, transmission was eliminated in the district by December 2014. We describe interventions underpinning successful EVD control in Kailahun and implications for EVD control in other areas. METHODS: Internal service data and published reports from response agencies were analysed to describe the structure and type of response activities, EVD case numbers and epidemic characteristics. This included daily national situation reports and District-level data and reports of the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation, and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) patient data and internal epidemiological reports. We used EVD case definitions provided by the World Health Organisation over the course of the outbreak. Characteristics assessed included level of response activities and epidemiological features such as reported exposure (funeral-related or not), time interval between onset of illness and admission to the EVD Management Centre (EMC), work-related exposures (health worker or not) and mortality. We compared these characteristics between two time periods—June to July (the early period of response), and August to December (when coverage and quality of response had improved). A stochastic model was used to predict case numbers per generation with different numbers of beds and a varying percentage of community cases detected. RESULTS: There were 652 probable/confirmed EVD cases from June-December 2014 in Kailahun. An EMC providing patient care opened in June. By August 2014 an integrated detection, treatment, and prevention strategy was in place across the district catchment zone. From June-July to August-December 2014 surveillance and contact tracing staff increased from 1.0 to 8.8 per confirmed EVD case, EMC capacity increased from 32 to 100 beds, the number of burial teams doubled, and health promotion activities increased in coverage. These improvements in response were associated with the following changes between the same periods: the proportion of confirmed/probable cases admitted to the EMC increased from 35% to 83% (χ(2) p-value<0·001), the proportion of confirmed patients admitted to the EMC <3 days of symptom onset increased from 19% to 37% (χ(2) p-value <0·001), and reported funeral contact in those admitted decreased from 33% to 16% (χ(2) p-value <0·001). Mathematical modelling confirmed the importance of both patient management capacity and surveillance and contact tracing for EVD control. DISCUSSION: Our findings demonstrate that control of EVD can be achieved using established interventions based on identification and appropriate management of those who are at risk of and develop EVD, including in the context of ongoing transmission in surrounding regions. Key attributes in achieving control were sufficient patient care capacity (including admission to specialist facilities of suspect and probable cases for assessment), integrated with adequate staffing and resourcing of community-based case detection and prevention activities. The response structure and coverage targets we present are of value in informing effective control in current and future EVD outbreaks.
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spelling pubmed-47849432016-03-23 Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone Lokuge, Kamalini Caleo, Grazia Greig, Jane Duncombe, Jennifer McWilliam, Nicholas Squire, James Lamin, Manjo Veltus, Emily Wolz, Anja Kobinger, Gary de la Vega, Marc-Antoine Gbabai, Osman Nabieu, Sao Lamin, Mohammed Kremer, Ronald Danis, Kostas Banks, Emily Glass, Kathryn PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article INTRODUCTION: The scale and geographical distribution of the current outbreak in West Africa raised doubts as to the effectiveness of established methods of control. Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) was first detected in Sierra Leone in May 2014 in Kailahun district. Despite high case numbers elsewhere in the country, transmission was eliminated in the district by December 2014. We describe interventions underpinning successful EVD control in Kailahun and implications for EVD control in other areas. METHODS: Internal service data and published reports from response agencies were analysed to describe the structure and type of response activities, EVD case numbers and epidemic characteristics. This included daily national situation reports and District-level data and reports of the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation, and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) patient data and internal epidemiological reports. We used EVD case definitions provided by the World Health Organisation over the course of the outbreak. Characteristics assessed included level of response activities and epidemiological features such as reported exposure (funeral-related or not), time interval between onset of illness and admission to the EVD Management Centre (EMC), work-related exposures (health worker or not) and mortality. We compared these characteristics between two time periods—June to July (the early period of response), and August to December (when coverage and quality of response had improved). A stochastic model was used to predict case numbers per generation with different numbers of beds and a varying percentage of community cases detected. RESULTS: There were 652 probable/confirmed EVD cases from June-December 2014 in Kailahun. An EMC providing patient care opened in June. By August 2014 an integrated detection, treatment, and prevention strategy was in place across the district catchment zone. From June-July to August-December 2014 surveillance and contact tracing staff increased from 1.0 to 8.8 per confirmed EVD case, EMC capacity increased from 32 to 100 beds, the number of burial teams doubled, and health promotion activities increased in coverage. These improvements in response were associated with the following changes between the same periods: the proportion of confirmed/probable cases admitted to the EMC increased from 35% to 83% (χ(2) p-value<0·001), the proportion of confirmed patients admitted to the EMC <3 days of symptom onset increased from 19% to 37% (χ(2) p-value <0·001), and reported funeral contact in those admitted decreased from 33% to 16% (χ(2) p-value <0·001). Mathematical modelling confirmed the importance of both patient management capacity and surveillance and contact tracing for EVD control. DISCUSSION: Our findings demonstrate that control of EVD can be achieved using established interventions based on identification and appropriate management of those who are at risk of and develop EVD, including in the context of ongoing transmission in surrounding regions. Key attributes in achieving control were sufficient patient care capacity (including admission to specialist facilities of suspect and probable cases for assessment), integrated with adequate staffing and resourcing of community-based case detection and prevention activities. The response structure and coverage targets we present are of value in informing effective control in current and future EVD outbreaks. Public Library of Science 2016-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4784943/ /pubmed/26959413 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004498 Text en © 2016 Lokuge et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lokuge, Kamalini
Caleo, Grazia
Greig, Jane
Duncombe, Jennifer
McWilliam, Nicholas
Squire, James
Lamin, Manjo
Veltus, Emily
Wolz, Anja
Kobinger, Gary
de la Vega, Marc-Antoine
Gbabai, Osman
Nabieu, Sao
Lamin, Mohammed
Kremer, Ronald
Danis, Kostas
Banks, Emily
Glass, Kathryn
Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title_full Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title_fullStr Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title_full_unstemmed Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title_short Successful Control of Ebola Virus Disease: Analysis of Service Based Data from Rural Sierra Leone
title_sort successful control of ebola virus disease: analysis of service based data from rural sierra leone
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4784943/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26959413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004498
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