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Strengthening event-based surveillance (EBS): a case study from Afghanistan.
Tahoun, Mohamed Mostafa; Sahak, Mohammad Nadir; Habibi, Muzhgan; Ahadi, Mohamad Jamaluddin; Rasoly, Bahara; Shivji, Sabrina; Aboushady, Ahmed Taha; Nabeth, Pierre; Sadek, Mahmoud; Abouzeid, Alaa.
Affiliation
  • Tahoun MM; World Health Organization Country Office, Kabul, Afghanistan.
  • Sahak MN; High Institute of Public Health, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt.
  • Habibi M; Eastern Mediterranean Region WHO Office, Cairo, Egypt.
  • Ahadi MJ; Eastern Mediterranean Region WHO Office, Cairo, Egypt. habibim@who.int.
  • Rasoly B; Ministry of Public Health, Kabul, Afghanistan.
  • Shivji S; Ministry of Public Health, Kabul, Afghanistan.
  • Aboushady AT; United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA.
  • Nabeth P; Eastern Mediterranean Region WHO Office, Cairo, Egypt.
  • Sadek M; Division of infectious diseases, Brigham and women's hospital, Harvard medical school, Boston, MA, USA.
  • Abouzeid A; Eastern Mediterranean Region WHO Office, Cairo, Egypt.
Confl Health ; 18(1): 39, 2024 Apr 30.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38689351
ABSTRACT
The sustained instability in Afghanistan, along with ongoing disease outbreaks and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, has significantly affected the country.During the COVID-19 pandemic, the country's detection and response capacities faced challenges. Case identification was done in all health facilities from primary to tertiary levels but neglected cases at the community level, resulting in undetected and uncontrolled transmission from communities. This emphasizes a missed opportunity for early detection that Event-Based Surveillance (EBS) could have facilitated.Therefore, Afghanistan planned to strengthen the EBS component of the national public health surveillance system to enhance the capacity for the rapid detection and response to infectious disease outbreaks, including COVID-19 and other emerging diseases. This effort was undertaken to promptly mitigate the impact of such outbreaks.We conducted a landscape assessment of Afghanistan's public health surveillance system to identify the best way to enhance EBS, and then we crafted an implementation work plan. The work plan included the following

steps:

establishing an EBS multisectoral coordination and working group, identifying EBS information sources, prioritizing public health events of importance, defining signals, establishing reporting mechanisms, and developing standard operating procedures and training guides.EBS is currently being piloted in seven provinces in Afghanistan. The lessons learned from the pilot phase will support its overall expansion throughout the country.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Confl Health Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: Afghanistan

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Confl Health Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: Afghanistan