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Epidemiology of Ebola Virus Disease in the Western Area Region of Sierra Leone, 2014-2015.
Lamunu, Margaret; Olu, Olushayo Oluseun; Bangura, James; Yoti, Zabulon; Samba, Thomas Takpau; Kargbo, David Kabba; Dafae, Foday Mohamed; Raja, Muhammad Ali; Sempira, Noah; Ivan, Michael Lyazi; Sing, Aarti; Kurti-George, Fredson; Worku, Negusu; Mitula, Pamela; Ganda, Louisa; Samupindi, Robert; Conteh, Roland; Kamara, Kande-Bure; Muraguri, Beatrice; Kposowa, Michael; Charles, Joseph; Mugaga, Malimbo; Dye, Christopher; Banerjee, Anshu; Formenty, Pierre; Kargbo, Brima; Aylward, Raymond Bruce.
Afiliação
  • Lamunu M; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Olu OO; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Kigali , Rwanda.
  • Bangura J; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Yoti Z; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Samba TT; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Kargbo DK; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Dafae FM; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Raja MA; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Sempira N; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Ivan ML; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Sing A; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Kurti-George F; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Worku N; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Mitula P; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Ganda L; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Samupindi R; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Conteh R; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Kamara KB; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Muraguri B; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Kposowa M; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Charles J; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Mugaga M; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Dye C; World Health Organization (WHO) Headquarters , Geneva , Switzerland.
  • Banerjee A; World Health Organization (WHO) Country Office , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Formenty P; World Health Organization (WHO) Headquarters , Geneva , Switzerland.
  • Kargbo B; Ministry of Health and Sanitation , Freetown , Sierra Leone.
  • Aylward RB; World Health Organization (WHO) Headquarters , Geneva , Switzerland.
Front Public Health ; 5: 33, 2017.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28303239
INTRODUCTION: Western Area (WA) of Sierra Leone including the capital, Freetown, experienced an unprecedented outbreak of Ebola from 2014 to 2015. At the onset of the epidemic, there was little information about the epidemiology, transmission dynamics, and risk factors in urban settings as previous outbreaks were limited to rural/semi-rural settings. This study, therefore, aimed to describe the epidemiology of the outbreak and the factors which had most impact on the transmission of the epidemic and whether there were different drivers from those previously described in rural settings. METHODS: We conducted a descriptive epidemiology study in WA, Sierra Leone using secondary data from the National Ebola outbreak database. We also reviewed the Ebola situation reports, response strategy documents, and other useful documents. RESULTS: A total of 4,955 Ebola cases were identified between June 2014 and November 2015, although there were reports of cases occurring in WA toward end of May. All wards were affected, and Waterloo Area I (Ward 330), the capital city of Western Area Rural District, recorded the highest numbers of cases (580) and deaths (236). Majority of cases (63.4%) and deaths (66.8%) were in WA Urban District (WAU); 44 cases were imported from other provinces. Only 20% of cases had a history of contact with an Ebola case, and more than 30% were death alerts. Equal numbers of males and females were infected, and very few cases (3.2%) were health workers. Overall, transmission was through contact with infected individuals, and intense transmission occurred at the community level. In WAU, transmission was mostly between neighbors and among inhabitants of shared accommodations. The drivers of transmission included high population movement to and from WA, overcrowding, fear and lack of trust in the response, and negative community behaviors. Transmission was mostly through contact and with limited transmission through sex and breast milk. CONCLUSION: The unprecedented outbreak in WA was attributed to delayed detection, inadequate preparedness and response, intense population movements, overcrowding, and unresponsive communities. Anticipation, strengthening preparedness for early detection, and swift and effective response remains critical in mitigating a potential urban explosion of similar future outbreaks.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies / Screening_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies / Screening_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article